Iran activists brush off claim morality police abolished
The Hindu
Mahsa Amini was accused of flouting Iran's strict dress code demanding women wear modest clothing and the hijab headscarf
Campaigners backing Iran's protest movement on Monday dismissed a claim that the Islamic republic is disbanding its notorious morality police, insisting there was no change to its restrictive dress rules for women.
There were also calls on social media for a three-day strike, more than two months into the wave of civil unrest sparked by the death of Kurdish-Iranian woman Mahsa Amini, 22, after her arrest by the morality police in Tehran.
Amini was accused of flouting Iran's strict dress code demanding women wear modest clothing and the hijab headscarf, and her death sparked protests that have spiralled into the biggest challenge to the regime since the 1979 Islamic revolution.
Also Read | Iran’s Attorney General says hijab law under review
Iran's Prosecutor General Mohammad Jafar Montazeri, in a surprise move at the weekend, was quoted as saying that the morality police units — known as gasht-e ershad (guidance patrol) — had been closed down.
But activists were sceptical about his comments, which appeared to be an impromptu response to a question at a conference rather than a clearly signposted announcement on the morality police, which is run by the Interior Ministry.
Moreover, they said, their abolition would mark no change to Iran's headscarf policy — a key ideological pillar for its clerical leadership — but rather a switch in tactics on enforcing it.
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