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TEHRAN - Iranian police will crack down on women in Tehran flouting Islamic dress codes with winter fashions deemed immodest, such as tight trousers tucked into long boots, an officer was quoted as saying yesterday.
"Considering the start of the cold season and its special way of dressing, police will start early next week a drive against women who wear improper dress," Tehran police chief Ahmad Reza Radan was quoted as saying by state news agency IRNA.
"Tight trousers tucked inside long boots while wearing short overcoats are against Islamic codes," he said.
"Wearing a hat or cap instead of scarves is also against Islamic dress codes."
Police regularly clamp down on skimpier clothing and looser headscarves in the northern summer. This year the campaign has run into the autumn.
Enforcement of Islamic dress codes that require women to cover their hair and disguise the shape of their body with loose overcoats has become sterner since President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad came to power in 2005.
Women found dressing inappropriately may be warned or, particularly for repeat offenders, can be taken to a police station and fined. Police this year have also cracked down on men sporting what are considered "Western" spiked haircuts.
Young women, particularly in wealthier urban areas, often challenge limitations by wearing tight clothing and colourful headscarves that barely cover their hair. The codes are less commonly challenged in poor suburbs and rural regions.
- Reuters