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Iran capital has 7,000 undercover morality crime agents

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Police in Iran's capital have a network of 7,000 undercover agents whose job is to inform on alleged moral transgressors in the Islamic republic, a top official said Monday.

Bad veiling -- covering the head is mandatory for women in Iran -- and anti-social behaviour is among the crimes the force has been tasked with tackling.

The men and women's "undercover patrols will confront implicit transgressions in the city," according to General Hossein Sajedinia, Tehran's police chief.

"Confronting bad hijab and removal of veils inside cars, driving recklessly, parading in the streets, harassing women and stopping noise pollution are the priorities" for the agents, he said

Sajedinia's remarks were published by Mizan Online, the official news service for Iran's judiciary, along with pictures of himself and a large formation of plain-clothed agents in Tehran.

When in public, all women in the Islamic republic, including foreigners, are required to wear at least a loose scarf, known as hijab, which covers the hair and neck.

Since the mid-1990s, however, there has been a gradual change in the dress code with some women, particularly in more affluent northern neighbourhoods, wearing colourful tight-fitting coats and loose scarves.

If the agents observe such violations they report the alleged offender to police who will then be contacted and later summoned, Sajedinia said.

The agents, bearing judicial orders, are not allowed to engage people directly and will only report to the police.

Police in Iran’s capital have a network of 7,000 undercover agents whose job is to inform on alleged moral transgressors in the Islamic republic, a top official said Monday.

Bad veiling — covering the head is mandatory for women in Iran — and anti-social behaviour is among the crimes the force has been tasked with tackling.

The men and women’s “undercover patrols will confront implicit transgressions in the city,” according to General Hossein Sajedinia, Tehran’s police chief.

“Confronting bad hijab and removal of veils inside cars, driving recklessly, parading in the streets, harassing women and stopping noise pollution are the priorities” for the agents, he said

Sajedinia’s remarks were published by Mizan Online, the official news service for Iran’s judiciary, along with pictures of himself and a large formation of plain-clothed agents in Tehran.

When in public, all women in the Islamic republic, including foreigners, are required to wear at least a loose scarf, known as hijab, which covers the hair and neck.

Since the mid-1990s, however, there has been a gradual change in the dress code with some women, particularly in more affluent northern neighbourhoods, wearing colourful tight-fitting coats and loose scarves.

If the agents observe such violations they report the alleged offender to police who will then be contacted and later summoned, Sajedinia said.

The agents, bearing judicial orders, are not allowed to engage people directly and will only report to the police.

AFP
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