
News


Share
Published 11:26 6 Sept 2022 BST
Explore more on these topics:
It is currently compulsory for women over the age of nine to wear a hijab, but women have become more resistant with many sharing videos on social media without hijabs on only a month before the new law came into play.
According to reports from The Guardian, Secretary of Iran's Headquarters for Promoting Virtue and Preventing Vice, Mohammad Saleh Hashemi Golpayegani, said that the government now plans on using facial recognition to prevent this.
Women have been protesting the new laws, with one woman, 28 year old Sepideh Rashno, getting on public transport without her hijab.
She was harassed by other passengers and eventually forced off the bus, and days after the footage of her was posted online by her accuser, she was arrested.
According to the Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), she was then forced to confess and apologise to her accuser on television.
According to article 638 of the Islamic Penal Code, any woman refusing to wear a hijab in public is a criminal act, punishable by flogging, imprisonment or a fine.
Jennie’s Law to be brought before Cabinet tomorrow
Jennie’s Law will be named after Jennifer Poole, who was murdered by her ex-partner in 2021. Jennie’s Law, legislation that would see domestic abusers named on a publicly available register, is set to be brought before Cabinet tomorrow. The bill will allow those convicted of domestic violence to be named on a register that will […]
News
3h
Parents in Ireland warned over the use of ‘baby sleep pillows’
Experts have warned parents that the use of baby sleep pillows can cause death through suffocation or overheating. The Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (CCPC) has warned parents about purchasing pillows marketed as sleeping aids for babies. The CCPC confirmed that these baby sleep pillows pose a safety risk when placed beside unattended babies and […]
News
4h
James Van Der Beek’s ex-wife marries three months after actor’s death
News