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Iran's New Hijab Bill Faces Strong Public Rejection

Maryam Sinaiee
Maryam Sinaiee

Iran International

Oct 27, 2023, 02:39 GMT+1Updated: 11:42 GMT

The reformist Shargh daily in Iran reported that 84 percent of the over 12,000 respondents to its poll on hijab are opposed to mandatory dress code and headscarves.

The online poll, completed over a period of one month, was conducted after lawmakers, mostly affiliated to the ultra-hardliner Paydari Party, ratified a bill in September that they have named "Protection of Family Through Promotion of Hijab and Chastity Culture".

The legislation, originally prepared by the government and later modified by the parliament’s hardliners, proposed various penalties including heavy cash fines for women who do not abide by the prescribed dress code of the Islamic Republic. This dress code consists of a headscarf covering all hair and the shoulders, a loose long tunic with long sleeves, and trousers that cover the legs to below the ankles.

The constitutionally mandated 12-member Guardian Council which, among other things, has the final say in legislation, rejected the bill on Tuesday in a surprising move and asked the parliament to amend it.

The Council has found several formal shortcomings in the text including vagueness of some of the terms used in it, such as a term translatable as “unchastity” or “corruptness”.

Iranian women walk on a street during the revival of morality police in Tehran, July 16, 2023.
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Iranian women walk on a street during the revival of morality police in Tehran, July 16, 2023.

The Council’s rejection of the proposed hijab law has nothing to do with people’s objection to it, Asieh Amini, a Norway-based women’s rights activist, told Iran International. According to Amini, the reason for the Council’s rejection is based on the hardliners’ wish to make the legislation as watertight as possible.

Others believe the Guardian Council may have been apprehensive about increasing the people’s discontent with the regime before the upcoming parliamentary elections in March. The elections four years ago had the lowest participation rate in the four-decade history of the Islamic Republic.

“The outcome of this bill will be nothing other than increasing people’s discontent, decline [of belief] in hijab, and deepening of the rift between the government and the people,” conservative journalist Behrouz Mirzaei-Shirmard tweeted before the Council’s rejection of the bill. He said he hoped “those in the system who are wise and care” would stop the bill, which “is in contradiction with citizen’s rights” from being approved. 

In the past few months, hardliners have tried to impose strict hijab rules in government offices, schools and universities, hospitals and other public places. Nevertheless, many women are defying the hijab rules.

For instance, Habib Ilbeigi, the director of the supervision department of the Islamic Guidance Ministry’s Cinema Organization, said that actresses who have defied hijab standards will be banned from acting.

A mosaic picture of some of Iranian actresses who were banned for defying mandatory hijab
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A mosaic picture of some of Iranian actresses who were banned for defying mandatory hijab

The department has released a list of banned actresses that includes many popular actresses including Baran Kowsari, Vishka Asayesh, Taraneh Alidoosti, Katayoun Riahi, Pantea Bahram, Hengameh Ghaziani and Pegah Ahangarani.

The organization is mandated with the approval of public screening and streaming of all films produced in Iran, and very often implements censorship by rejecting scripts or modifying them.

Sources in Iran say in many places, wearing the hijab now is stranger than not wearing it, as the number of women wearing ordinary clothes and no headscarf has hugely increased.

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Iranian Official Denies Plans To Participate In Gaza War

Oct 26, 2023, 23:04 GMT+1

A member of Iran’s Expediency Council says the Islamic Republic does not intend to participate in the Gaza war in spite of funding its proxy Hamas.

Mohammad Sadr told the pro-reform Ham-Mihan daily on Thursday that Tehran will only continue to “exert pressure on Israel's supporters to stop the attacks on Gaza," though the Islamic Republic provides training, weaponry and intelligence to its largest Palestinian proxy.

Hamas declared war on Israel on October 7 after its militia invaded Israel by air, land and sea, killing at least 1,400 and taking at least 220 captive.The majority killed were civilians, including women, children and whole families.

The group, designated by the UK, US and EU, began the operation named the 'Al-Aqsa Flood' with a barrage of at least 3,000 rockets as preparation for what would become the single most deadly day for Jews since the Holocaust.

Israel has been hitting Gaza with a continuous flow of airstrikes and is preparing for a ground offensive as it vows to destroy the Iran-backed proxy.

Sadr warned that if a ground incursion takes place, the risk of escalation is higher, demanding a ceasefire, which Israel claims will only be manipulated by Hamas.

"Current initiatives by certain nations and international bodies aim to broker a Gaza ceasefire and compel Israel to halt its actions. Should a ceasefire be achieved without Israeli ground intervention in Gaza, the prospect of the conflict extending to other nations is highly unlikely," he said.

"However, in the event a ceasefire is not reached, and the Israeli military launches a ground incursion into Gaza, persisting in the extensive casualties among Palestinian civilians, the risk of an escalation of the conflict with involvement of other parties becomes more probable."

Iranian proxy Hezbollah in Lebanon continues to target Israel from its northern border while missiles have been fired towards Israel from its proxies in Yemen and Syria already.


US Forces Will Not Be Spared If Gaza War Persists, Iran Warns At UN

Oct 26, 2023, 21:55 GMT+1
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Iran International Newsroom

Iran’s foreign minister told the United Nations on Thursday that US forces in the Middle East will not be spared if the Israeli offensive against Hamas continues.

Hossein Amir-Abdollahian reiterated the regime’s warning during an emergency meeting of the UN General Assembly on the Israel-Hamas conflict in New York. "I say frankly to the American statesmen, who are now managing the genocide in Palestine, that we do not welcome the expansion of the war in the region. But if the genocide in Gaza continues, they will not be spared from this fire.”

“It is our home and West Asia is our region, we do not compromise with any party and any side, and we have no reservation when it comes to our homes’ security," he added.

Amir-Abdollahian, who usually speaks in Persian in his diplomatic interactions, delivered the threat in English while in New York, a trip that has invoked strong protests by US lawmakers and activists who have repeatedly urged Washington to deny visas to Iranian officials.

After several minutes of speaking in English, which he spent justifying the brutal Hamas incursion into Israel as a natural reaction to occupation, he switched back to Persian. One of the keywords that Amir-Abdollahian tried to convey in English was "genocide” in reference to Israel’s retaliatory attacks on Gaza after Hamas slaughtered more than 1,400 Israelis and took over 220 as hostages. Palestinian authorities say Israeli air raids have killed more than 7,000 Palestinians, a figure that many such as US President Joe Biden have cast aspersions on.

The regime’s top diplomat said Hamas has told Iran that it was ready to release civilian hostages, adding, "The Islamic Republic of Iran stands ready to play its part in this very important humanitarian endeavor, along with Qatar and Turkey. Naturally, the release of the 6,000 Palestinian prisoners is another necessity and responsibility of the global community." Iranians say on social media that Tehran is a master of prisoner swap deals, and has proved this expertise after it made Washington release billions of dollars of frozen funds as well as five Iranians from US prisons in exchange for five Iranian-Americans held hostage in Iran.

Another salient psychological and linguistic effort by Amir-Abdollahian was aimed at portraying Hamas as a group of “freedom-fighters” or a “liberation army” and not a terrorist group as designated by the US and several other countries.

The regime’s foreign minister referred to Security Council Resolutions No. 309 and 323 ratified 1972 in the case of Namibia, stating that the "inalienable right to self-determination and independence" is permanent and does not disappear over time. “Therefore, just as the prolonged occupation of the land does not create any rights for the occupier, the passage of time does not diminish the right to determine the fate of the occupied nation.” He used this argument as a tactic to conclude that “the Palestinian nation, as a nation under occupation, has the legitimate right to resist the occupation using all available methods, including armed struggle." Therefore, the October 7 attack – codenamed operation al-Aqsa flood by Hamas – should not be described as a terrorist act, he said.

Amir-Abdollahian complained that the US and several European countries have sided with Israel and refer to the Palestinian liberation movement as "terrorists”. He claimed that the US' “unwavering and permanent” support for Israel as “the main cause of the failures of the United Nations, especially the Security Council, in upholding the rights of the Palestinians.”

He did not openly repeat the Iranian regime's call for the destruction of Israel, but said the only solution to the conflict is “through the full realization of the inalienable right of this nation to self-determination and the establishment of an independent Palestinian state in all of the Palestinian territories and with Al-Quds as its capital.”

Emphasizing that “the entire land of Palestine, from the sea to the river, belongs only to the original Palestinians, including Christians, Jews and the Muslims,” Amir-Abdollahian said Iran has “offered a political and democratic initiative which includes the holding of a referendum for self-determination amongst the original residents of Palestine.”

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian speaks to an emergency special session of the United Nations General Assembly on the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas at UN headquarters in New York City, October 26, 2023.
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Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian speaks to an emergency special session of the United Nations General Assembly on the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas at UN headquarters in New York City, October 26, 2023.

Amir-Abdollahian started his speech with a statement that is globally contested, if not debunked altogether. “The world knows that the Islamic Republic of Iran plays the most constructive role in helping peace and security in West Asia and the whole world as well as fighting terrorism and ISIS,” he claimed despite many labeling Iran as “the biggest state sponsor of terrorism” with a “hostage diplomacy” modus operandi.

Pension Fund Crisis In Iran Can Lead To More Political Instability

Oct 26, 2023, 18:48 GMT+1
•
Iran International Newsroom

A worsening crisis of insolvency in Iran's social security system and pension funds, poses an additional threat to the unpopular establishment in Iran.

The reports and videos sent to Iran International demonstrate that retirees in different provinces such as the oil-rich Khuzestan, Kermanshah and Kordestan have launched rallies over the recent days to voice their discontent about the government’s economic policies. The protests are expected to continue as pension funds in Iran are experiencing a full-fledged financial crisis.

Shargh newspaper in Tehran provided coverage from a gathering of economic experts who discussed the issue, highlighting the challenges faced by Iran's pension funds, with many receiving no funding at present. The government's debts to Iran's Social Security Organization are steadily increasing, leading to concerns that the government might need to transfer the entire oil industry to the Social Security Organization to settle its debts.

Iran’s pension funds find themselves in an unfavorable situation with many of them receiving zero input at the present, Shargh quoted a former director of Iran’s Social Security Organization Mehdi Karabasian as saying.

Hossein Abdoh, economist and former Secretary General of Tehran Stock Exchange, also pointed out that the Iranian government does not fully comprehend the imminent crisis of the pension funds.

Economist Hossein Abdoh Tabrizi (undated)
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Economist Hossein Abdoh Tabrizi

He noted that the government’s debts to Iran’s Social Security Organization are increasing steadily.

“It seems that one day the government will have to give the whole oil industry to the Social Security Organization to settle its debts,” Abdoh warned.

Iran has faced a serious economic crisis since the United States withdrew from the JCPOA nuclear accord in 208 and imposed oil and banking sanctions. Its failure to reach a new agreement under the Biden administration has gradually drained government finances and rounds of serious anti-regime protests have taken place.

Iran’s Social Security Organization is a public institution that provides health insurance, pension and unemployment benefits to its members. They range from workers and government employees to self-employed individuals. According to official statistics, 53 percent of the Iranian population receive some type of benefit from the organization.

On October 24, Moslem Salehi, a member of the Economic Commission of Iran's parliament, said in an interview with Tasnim news agency that all pension funds, “except two or three,” have gone bankrupt.

Without the government’s assistance, these funds will not be able to meet the needs of the retirees, he stipulated. However, the issue is not limited emergency funding, but the underlying factor of a weak economy, mismanagement, corruption, and a huge government budget deficit.

According to Shargh, in the current budget, $6.62 billion of public expenditures has been allocated to pension funds. This is while the government still owes $3.4 billion to the pension funds.

Experts have warned against the policy of funding pension funds via annual budgets, saying that this will result in unfortunate consequences in the future.

In May 2023, the then-director general of social insurance in Iran’s Ministry of Labor, Sajjad Badamforoush said that even if the government sells the two southern islands of Kish and Qeshm and Khuzestan province, it will not be able to pay pensioners' arrears.

He was fired a few days after these remarks.

Earlier in the year, a report in Rouydad24 also pointed out that the crisis concerning the pension funds will paralyze Iran and will plunge its economy into a new crisis in less than two decades.

Touching upon the critical condition of the pension funds, Hossein Amerian, general director of steel industry pension fund, revealed in April 2023 that around $400 million was lost either through mismanagement or embezzlement.

There are 800 investigations taking place to identify all those who are responsible for the losses, he added.

In May 2023, Rahim Mombeini, the deputy head of Iran’s Planning and Budget Organization, announced that President Ebrahim Raisi’s administration faces a huge budget deficit this year.

According to Mombeini, the amount of the Iranian government internal debts has increased about 900-fold over the past decade to $60 billion. This amount of debt, which is equivalent to 31% of the GDP, includes government debts to banks, the Central Bank of Iran, pension and social security funds, public and private sector contractors, and bonds that have been issued in previous years.

Azerbaijan Shifts Focus To Iran For Land Corridor Amid Armenia Impasse

Oct 26, 2023, 18:30 GMT+1

Azerbaijan Republic has redirected its efforts away from seeking a land corridor through Armenia to connect with the Azerbaijani enclave of Nakhichevan.

Instead, the nation is now exploring discussions with its southern neighbor, Iran, as disclosed by a senior Azerbaijani official on Wednesday.

Hikmet Hajiyev, a top foreign policy advisor to President Aliyev, told Reuters that "Azerbaijan had no plans to seize Zangezur," referring to the proposed corridor aimed at connecting mainland Azerbaijan to the Nakhichevan enclave, which shares a border with Turkey, a close ally of Baku.

He explained, "After the two sides failed to agree on its opening, the project has lost its attractiveness for us — we can do this with Iran instead."

Armenia strongly opposed the notion of such a corridor, apprehensive that it might lead to additional territorial concessions following Azerbaijan's swift military campaign resulting in the seizure of the long contested Nagorno-Karabakh region in September.

Although internationally recognized as Azerbaijani territory, Karabakh had been under the control of ethnic Armenians since the dissolution of the Soviet Union in the 1990s, prompting the mass displacement of approximately 120,000 ethnic Armenians into Armenia.

Azerbaijan had recently urged the inclusion of its long-standing request for a transport corridor through southern Armenia in the ongoing peace treaty negotiations.

Iran’s defense ministry earlier warned that it will not tolerate any changes to international borders in the region.

Amnesty Urges Iran To End Brutal Crackdown On Baluch Protesters

Oct 26, 2023, 16:59 GMT+1

Amnesty International has called on Iran to cease the "unlawful use of force" in response to the upcoming Friday protests in Zahedan.

In a statement issued on Thursday, the human rights organization urged the regime's authorities to "refrain from unlawfully deploying repressive forces during the upcoming Friday protests and to respect the right to peaceful assembly."

Diana Eltahawy, Amnesty International’s Deputy Regional Director for the Middle East and North Africa, said in the statement, “The authorities are ramping up their brutality to stop Baluchi protesters from gathering each week in Zahedan.”

She called upon governments worldwide to “urgently call on the Iranian authorities to halt the unlawful use of force and firearms against peaceful protesters, stop torturing detainees and release children and all others detained solely for peacefully exercising their rights.”

Earlier, human rights media had reported the names of 112 citizens detained during the protests in Zahedan the previous Friday, including 33 children. Among the detainees is Mowlavi Fazl ul-Rahman Kouhi, the prayer leader of the village of Pashamag in Sarbaz County, Sistan and Baluchestan. No information is available regarding the charges or the whereabouts of these individuals.

Sistan and Baluchestan province was one of the regions with the highest number of protests during the nationwide protests which began last year in addition to the highest number of casualties. During the 'Bloody Zahedan Friday' on September 30 last year, nearly a hundred people, including children, were killed by the regime's security forces.