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Fear Grows Among Iranian Clerics Over Hijab Rebellion

Maryam Sinaiee
Maryam Sinaiee

Iran International

Apr 11, 2024, 14:51 GMT+1Updated: 17:21 GMT+0
Iranian women walk along an avenue in downtown Tehran without wearing mandatory headscarves, 12 September 2023 (Reuters)
Iranian women walk along an avenue in downtown Tehran without wearing mandatory headscarves, 12 September 2023 (Reuters)

Recent statements from top clerics and Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei reflect their rising concerns about the weakening of their ideological control due to growing defiance against hijab.

Khamenei and other clerics, who previously dismissed women opposing mandatory hijab as a small minority influenced by "the enemy," are now framing unveiling as a "challenge" and advocating for stricter enforcement of hijab laws.

During a recent address to government officials, Khamenei claimed to have received "reliable reports" of women being paid to unveil, allegedly by "the enemy," to undermine the hijab. He labeled hijab defiance as "an imposed challenge," suggesting it was orchestrated to weaken societal adherence to hijab.

Furthermore, Khamenei stated that "the enemies" aim to revert women's status to pre-Islamic Revolution times when their behavior, attitude, and presence in society were deemed unacceptable.

In his Eid al-Fitr sermon a week later, Khamenei also addressed defiance against Ramadan restrictions for the first time, signaling a broader concern over challenges to Islamic norms and values.

Women at a café in the southern city of Shiraz  (April 2024)
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Women at a café in the southern city of Shiraz

“This year I received some reports about deliberate disregard of fasting in some public places. The Islamic Republic certainly does not seek to force people to piety, but it has a responsibility regarding religious norms being broken. Authorities and people should not neglect this and those who do amr-e be marouf va nahy az monkar should carry out their duty,” he said.

Amr-e be marouf va nahy az monkar means calling others to enjoin what is good, such as hijab and fasting, and forbid them from doing what is wrong or sinful. Vigilantes often confront others, sometimes even violently, for hijab and fasting by arguing that they are only carrying out their religious duty.

Defiance of hijab, once only noticeable in larger cities such as Tehran, has now spread even to smaller and more conservative cities and towns including the religious city of Qom, the home of the majority of the country’s seminaries.

Defiance of hijab has become a symbol of defying the Islamic government in the perceptions of Iranians. This is perhaps the main reason for the discomfort clerics feel about the phenomenon.

In his Monday lecture to seminarians, the conservative Ayatollah Mohammad-Javad Fazel-Lankarani criticized the “cultural authorities” for “not doing anything in the past forty years [about hijab]” while alluding to the spread of unveiling to Qom. He, too, accused “the enemy” of seeking to restore the circumstances in the society to before the Islamic Revolution when hijab was a personal choice.

“Can’t we even reform the city of Qom? One regrets getting out of the house because of the things one sees,” he asked, referring to women’s manifest defiance of compulsory hijab.

A girl on a street in the religious city of Mashhad (undated)
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A girl on a street in the religious city of Mashhad

Until a couple of decades ago, even women who covered their hair and wore loose, long tunics were in minority in the very conservative city of Qom where the long black veil called chador was the dominant form of hijab. Many women now only very partially cover their hair, wear heavy makeup and tight-fitting clothes, or even drop their headscarves on their shoulders to much chagrin of clerics and political hardliners of the conservative city.

Qom is Iran's second most important holy city after Mashhad, the country’s second-largest city and home to the shrine of the eight Shia Imam, where the spread of unveiling of women has been even more noticeable.

In his Eid al-Fitr sermon Wednesday, Mashhad’s ultra-hardliner imam, Ahmad Alamolhoda, also referred to the “current challenge over hijab” which he called “a puppet movement” that seeks to destroy Islam.

“The women who unveil and those who do not fully comply with the rules “should be aware that they are collaborating with the enemy who has not only targeted Islam but also the pure land of this country,” he said.

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Tehran Threatens US Against Defending Israel In Case Of Iran’s Reprisal

Apr 11, 2024, 14:40 GMT+1
•
Iran International Newsroom

Iran has threatened to target US forces in the Middle East if Washington helps Israel defend itself against any retaliatory Iranian action after its deadly airstrike in Damascus.

According to The Intercept’s report, “on Monday night, Iran conveyed to the Biden administration that if it involved itself in defending Israel were Tehran to undertake a retaliatory strike, it would consider the United States a viable target as well.”

Israel targeted Iran's consulate building in Damascus on April 1, killing 7 IRGC forces, including Mohammad Reza Zahedi, the highest-ranking commander of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Quds Force (IRGC-QF) in Lebanon and Syria. Since then, senior Iranian officials have vowed revenge against Israel.

The US National Security Council held a meeting on Tuesday to discuss Tehran’s threats, added The Intercept which claims to have reviewed notes of the meeting.

US officials have time and again stressed that Washington had no part in Israel’s strike on Iran’s consulate and seeks no further escalations in the region. However, President Joe Biden has vowed Washington’s “ironclad” support for Israel in the case of Iran’s reprisals.

"We're going to do all we can to protect Israel's security," he stressed on Wednesday.

On Monday, Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian claimed that the US had given Israel the green light to strike Iran’s consulate in Damascus.

While failing to provide any evidence for the allegation, Amir-Abdollahian said that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “would not have been able to do such a thing without the US green light.”

Iranian Activists Protest Islamic Scholar's Arrest For Criticizing Supreme Leader

Apr 11, 2024, 14:36 GMT+1

In response to the arrest of a Islamic scholar Sedigheh Vasmaghi, imprisoned for criticizing compulsory hijab laws and Iran's Supreme Leader, 320 Iranian political and civil activists have campaigned for her release.

The activists called for the immediate release of all political and ideological prisoners in Iran, particularly Vasmaghi who “has shown over the past four decades her care and concern for both Iran and Islam.”

The campaigners pointed out the reversal of the promises made in 1979 on the founding of the Islamic Republic, when it had promised freedom and justice at its inception.

Security forces arrested Vasmaghi, 63, on March 16 and subsequently transferred her to the notorious Evin Prison in Tehran. The arrest came after the scholar described Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei as a dictator and the ruling system as oppressive, slamming the compulsory hijab laws which have been at the heart of the 2022 Women, Life, Freedom movement.

She was arrested while attending the funeral of 16-year-old Armita Geravand, killed by hijab-enforcement agents in the Tehran metro last year.

Vasmaghi suffers from ill health and her condition has deteriorated since her arrest. Iran’s judiciary, however, has denied her sufficient medical treatment and has repeatedly denied her hospital treatment.

Lufthansa Extends Suspension Of Flights To Tehran

Apr 11, 2024, 13:41 GMT+1

Germany's Lufthansa extended a suspension of its flights to Tehran on Thursday with the Middle East on alert for Iranian retaliation for an Israeli air strike on Iran's consulate in Syria.

Lufthansa and its subsidiary Austrian Airlines are the only two Western carriers flying into Tehran, which is mostly served by Turkish and Middle Eastern airlines.

The region and the United States have been on alert for an attack by Iran since April 1, when Israeli warplanes are suspected to have bombed the Iranian embassy compound in Syria.

German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock called her Iranian counterpart Hossein Amirabdollahian to call for "maximum restraint" on all sides and avoiding further escalation.

Lufthansa said it had suspended flights to and from Tehran until probably April 13, extending its suspension by two days, to avoid its crew having to disembark to spend the night in the Iranian capital."

Last weekend it was decided not to operate a flight to Tehran with a layover for the crew due to the security situation," a spokesperson said. "On the route, the crew has to spend the night in Tehran before the return flight to Frankfurt. We want to avoid disembarking for safety reasons."

Austrian Airlines, which is owned by Lufthansa and flies from Vienna to Tehran six times a week, said it was still planning to fly on Thursday but was adjusting timings to avoid an overnight layover.

"The Austrian Airlines flight to Tehran scheduled for today will take place, but will depart from Vienna several hours late in order to minimise the time between landing and departure in Tehran," a spokesperson said.

Iranian air space is also a key overflight route for Emirates' and Qatar Airways' flights to Europe and North America.

Emirates, Qatar Airways, Turkish Airlines, Aeroflot and Air Arabia, among the airlines which fly to Tehran, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Flydubai said its flights to Iran are still currently scheduled to operate.

Businesses in Qatar, United Arab Emirates and Turkey were closed for the Muslim Eid al-Fitr holidays.

(Reporting by Reuters)

US Urged To Deny Visa To Iran FM, Delegation

Apr 11, 2024, 11:40 GMT+1

As calls to designate the IRGC grow, US lobbyists are pushing to ban Iran's foreign minister and delegation from the upcoming United Nations meeting on the Gaza war.

Among those leading the calls is Mark Wallace, the CEO of United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI), who said, “April 18 will mark the 41st anniversary of Hezbollah’s bombing of the US Embassy in Lebanon. Hossein Amir-Abdollahian’s presence on US soil would be an outrageous insult to the victims and their families,” in a letter to Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

According to reports, Amir-Abdollahian is scheduled to travel to the US to attend a United Nations meeting on the Gaza conflict on April 18, coinciding with the anniversary of the 1983 US Embassy bombing in Beirut which claimed the lives of 63 people, including 17 Americans.

Citing Amir-Abdollahian’s repeated meetings with Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh and Hezbollah chief, Hassan Nasrallah, the UANI ambassador also pointed to his complicity in the October 7 onslaught, which marked the deadliest day for Jews since the Holocaust, sparking the current Gaza war. According to the Wall Street Journal, the IRGC directly helped Hamas devise the plan for the October 7 attack.

Wallace also referred to the brutal repression of dissent in Iran as another reason Washington should refrain from issuing visas for Iran’s top diplomat and delegation. “While Amir-Abdollahian was in New York in January 2024, the regime executed Mohammad Ghobadlou, a 23-year-old Iranian protester - perhaps just as Amir-Abdollahian was ordering room service from his penthouse suite at the Millennium Hilton Hotel at UN Plaza," he said.

Ghobadlou was arrested during the 2022 nationwide protests and was executed in January on the charge of killing a policeman.

Back in March, 27 members of the House of Representatives called on the Biden administration to ban the entry of Iranian officials to the US but Washington continues to allow the regime entry to high level meetings of global leaders in spite of its being labeled as the world's leading state sponsor of terror according to the latest US reports. 


Khamenei Puts Public Pressure On Muslim Governments To Isolate Israel

Apr 11, 2024, 11:26 GMT+1
•
Mardo Soghom

Islamic Republic's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei on Thursday called on Muslim countries to isolate Israel, seemingly taking advantage of rising concerns about a retaliatory attack by Tehran.

Reports emerged on Wednesday indicating that American and Israeli intelligence agencies are anticipating an attack by the Islamic Republic in the coming days in retaliation for a devastating Israeli strike on April 1. Two top Revolutionary Guard generals and five other officers were killed when a precision missile flattened a building in the Iranian embassy compound in Damascus. Tehran began threatening retaliation, which could spark a direct war with Israel.

The issue of Gaza cannot be disregarded, Khamenei said, and insisted that it is at the forefront of concerns in the Islamic world, requiring a sense of collective responsibility from everyone. “The hearts of nations, even non-Muslim nations, resonate with the plight of Palestine and Gaza, evidenced by unprecedented rallies in Africa, Asia, Europe, and even the United States against the crimes of the Zionists.,” he told a group of government officials and unidentified foreign diplomats.

Khamenei, in a condescending tone, stated that the Islamic Republic “has the definite expectation and suggestion” that Islamic countries severe political and economic ties with Israel, at least until such a time when Israel stops attacking Hamas. He went on to say that if referendums were held, the majority of Muslims would support such a move, so their government should respect the public mood.

Once reports of an “imminent” Iranian attack emerged on Wednesday, US Middle East envoy Brett McGurk called the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Iraq to ask them to deliver a message to Iran urging it to lower tensions, a source with knowledge of the situation said. The calls took place, and the Iranian foreign minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian delivered the same message about isolating Israel to his UAE counterpart. He urged Muslim nations to coalesce and put pressure “on Israel and its backers to end the killings in Gaza.”

Turkey this week adopted the strategy demanded by Khamenei restricting exports of a wide range of products to Israel until a ceasefire is declared in Gaza. This was Ankara's first significant measure against Israel after six months of war.

Another major development on Wednesday was the death of Ismail Haniyeh’s three sons and three grandchildren in an Israeli airstrike in Gaza, that rather quickly faded in the news after reports about an imminent Iranian attack emerged later in the day.

Tehran has remained generally quiet about this development, with only the chief commander of the Revolutionary Guard publicly expressing his condolences to Iran’s close Palestinian ally. Calling the airstrike “on a civilian car” a “terrorist act” Hossein Salami both expressed sympathy and congratulated Haniyeh for the “martyrdom” of his sons.