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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Iranian morality police officers detain a woman on the street during a patrol to enforce the country’s compulsory hijab laws in Tehran on Sunday, July 2005. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Iranian female morality officers question a woman on a street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, July 31, 2005. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - A Female Iranian morality police officer warns a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 24, 2007. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - A Female Iranian morality police officer warns a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 24, 2007. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - A Female Iranian morality police officer warns a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 23, 2007. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - A Female Iranian morality police officer warns a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 23, 2007. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Iranian morality police officers warn a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Friday, May 27, 2005. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - A Female Iranian morality police officer warns a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 23, 2007. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - A Female Iranian morality police officer warns a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 23, 2007. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Iranian morality police officers warn a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 07, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Iranian morality police officers warn a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 23, 2007. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Iranian morality police officers warn a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Saturday May 28, 2005. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Members of Iranian’s morality police get ready ahead of a patrol to enforce the country’s compulsory hijab laws on the streets of Tehran on Sunday, April 07, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - A Female Iranian morality police officer warns a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 24, 2007. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - A Female Iranian morality police officer spots a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, May 29, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - A Female Iranian morality police officer spots a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, May 29, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - A Female Iranian morality police officer warns a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 24, 2007. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - A Female Iranian morality police officer warns a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 23, 2007. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - A Female Iranian morality police officer warns a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 07, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Members of Iranian’s morality police get ready ahead of a patrol to enforce the country’s compulsory hijab laws on the streets of Tehran on Sunday, April 07, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - A Female Iranian morality police officer warns a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 23, 2007. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - A Female Iranian morality police officer warns a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 23, 2007. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - A Female Iranian morality police officer warns a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 07, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Iranian morality police officer warns women on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 07, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Officers of morality police listen to their commander Morteza Talaie  ahead of a patrol to enforcing Iran’s compulsory hijab laws on the street of Tehran on Sunday, April 07, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Iranian female morality officer questions a woman on a street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 07, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - A Female Iranian morality police officer warns a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 07, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Female officers at the Iranian morality police unit sit in a car during a  patrol to enforce the country’s compulsory hijab laws in Tehran on Sunday, April 07, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Iranian morality police officers warn a woman on the street for violating the country’s compulsory hijab laws during a patrol in Tehran on Sunday, April 07, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Female members of Iranian’s morality police get ready ahead of a patrol to enforce the country’s compulsory hijab laws on the streets of Tehran on Sunday, April 07, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Iranian morality police officers patrol the street to enforce the country’s compulsory hijab laws in Tehran on Sunday, April 07, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Officers of morality police listen to their commander Morteza Talaie  ahead of a patrol to enforcing Iran’s compulsory hijab laws on the street of Tehran on Sunday, April 07, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Members of Iranian’s morality police get ready ahead of a patrol to enforce the country’s compulsory hijab laws on the streets of Tehran on Sunday, April 07, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Morteza Talaie briefs fellow officers at the Tehran’s morality police headquarters ahead of a patrol to enforce Iranian Islamic Republic’s compulsory hijab laws on the street on Sunday, April 07, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

Files - Crackdown On Women Intensifies Under Cover Of War - Tehran

File photo - Female members of Iranian’s morality police get ready ahead of a patrol to enforce the country’s compulsory hijab laws on the streets of Tehran on Sunday, April 07, 2004. Iranian women are facing tougher crackdowns for refusing to wear the compulsory hijab in the shadows of Iran’s conflict with Israel. While news of IRGC missile and drone operations against Israel over the weekend has overshadowed other events, on Saturday, as part of what they claim is a "national and public demand," the Iranian police have begun enforcing hijab regulations on women in a new initiative called the Noor plan, Persian for ‘light’. Morality police are also back on the streets in full force, having been scaled back since the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, with a stronger presence around Tehran’s central districts, full of police patrols, morality vans and police motorcycle patrols. Photo by Hossein Fatemi/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Reshuffle: Attal Named Prime Minister

Reshuffle: Attal Named Prime Minister

File photo - Gabriel Attal leaves after the weekly cabinet meeting at the presidential Elysee Palace in Paris, France on December 20, 2023. French lawmakers gave their final approval to a contested bill that toughens rules for immigrants on Tuesday, giving President Emmanuel Macron a policy victory that nonetheless exposed cracks in his centrist majority. The bill, a compromise reached between Macron's party and the conservative opposition, illustrates the rightward shift in politics in much of Europe, as governments try to fend off the rise of the far-right by being tougher on immigration. - French Minister of National Education Gabriel Attal is appointed Prime Minister following Elisabeth Borne. At 34, he became the youngest Prime Minister of the Fifth Republic. Photo by Eliot Blondet/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Reshuffle: Attal Named Prime Minister

Reshuffle: Attal Named Prime Minister

File photo - Gabriel Attal leaves after the weekly cabinet meeting at the presidential Elysee Palace in Paris, France on December 20, 2023. French lawmakers gave their final approval to a contested bill that toughens rules for immigrants on Tuesday, giving President Emmanuel Macron a policy victory that nonetheless exposed cracks in his centrist majority. The bill, a compromise reached between Macron's party and the conservative opposition, illustrates the rightward shift in politics in much of Europe, as governments try to fend off the rise of the far-right by being tougher on immigration. - French Minister of National Education Gabriel Attal is appointed Prime Minister following Elisabeth Borne. At 34, he became the youngest Prime Minister of the Fifth Republic. Photo by Eliot Blondet/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Reshuffle: Attal Could Be Named Prime Minister

Reshuffle: Attal Could Be Named Prime Minister

File photo - Gabriel Attal leaves after the weekly cabinet meeting at the presidential Elysee Palace in Paris, France on December 20, 2023. French lawmakers gave their final approval to a contested bill that toughens rules for immigrants on Tuesday, giving President Emmanuel Macron a policy victory that nonetheless exposed cracks in his centrist majority. The bill, a compromise reached between Macron's party and the conservative opposition, illustrates the rightward shift in politics in much of Europe, as governments try to fend off the rise of the far-right by being tougher on immigration. - French National Education Minister Gabriel Attal could be named Prime Minister after Elisabeth Borne spoke with President Emmanuel Macron as a cabinet reshuffle appears imminent. At 34, he could become the youngest Prime Minister of the Fifth Republic. Photo by Eliot Blondet/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Reshuffle: Attal Could Be Named Prime Minister

Reshuffle: Attal Could Be Named Prime Minister

File photo - Gabriel Attal leaves after the weekly cabinet meeting at the presidential Elysee Palace in Paris, France on December 20, 2023. French lawmakers gave their final approval to a contested bill that toughens rules for immigrants on Tuesday, giving President Emmanuel Macron a policy victory that nonetheless exposed cracks in his centrist majority. The bill, a compromise reached between Macron's party and the conservative opposition, illustrates the rightward shift in politics in much of Europe, as governments try to fend off the rise of the far-right by being tougher on immigration. - French National Education Minister Gabriel Attal could be named Prime Minister after Elisabeth Borne spoke with President Emmanuel Macron as a cabinet reshuffle appears imminent. At 34, he could become the youngest Prime Minister of the Fifth Republic. Photo by Eliot Blondet/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Harlem Desir at the presidential Elysee Palace in Paris, on December 20, 2023. French lawmakers gave their final approval to a contested bill that toughens rules for immigrants on Tuesday, giving President Emmanuel Macron a policy victory that nonetheless exposed cracks in his centrist majority. The bill, a compromise reached between Macron's party and the conservative opposition, illustrates the rightward shift in politics in much of Europe, as governments try to fend off the rise of the far-right by being tougher on immigration. Photo by Eliot Blondet/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Bruno Le Maire leaves after the weekly cabinet meeting at the presidential Elysee Palace in Paris, on December 20, 2023. French lawmakers gave their final approval to a contested bill that toughens rules for immigrants on Tuesday, giving President Emmanuel Macron a policy victory that nonetheless exposed cracks in his centrist majority. The bill, a compromise reached between Macron's party and the conservative opposition, illustrates the rightward shift in politics in much of Europe, as governments try to fend off the rise of the far-right by being tougher on immigration. Photo by Eliot Blondet/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Bruno Le Maire leaves after the weekly cabinet meeting at the presidential Elysee Palace in Paris, on December 20, 2023. French lawmakers gave their final approval to a contested bill that toughens rules for immigrants on Tuesday, giving President Emmanuel Macron a policy victory that nonetheless exposed cracks in his centrist majority. The bill, a compromise reached between Macron's party and the conservative opposition, illustrates the rightward shift in politics in much of Europe, as governments try to fend off the rise of the far-right by being tougher on immigration. Photo by Eliot Blondet/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Bruno Le Maire leaves after the weekly cabinet meeting at the presidential Elysee Palace in Paris, on December 20, 2023. French lawmakers gave their final approval to a contested bill that toughens rules for immigrants on Tuesday, giving President Emmanuel Macron a policy victory that nonetheless exposed cracks in his centrist majority. The bill, a compromise reached between Macron's party and the conservative opposition, illustrates the rightward shift in politics in much of Europe, as governments try to fend off the rise of the far-right by being tougher on immigration. Photo by Eliot Blondet/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Bruno Le Maire leaves after the weekly cabinet meeting at the presidential Elysee Palace in Paris, on December 20, 2023. French lawmakers gave their final approval to a contested bill that toughens rules for immigrants on Tuesday, giving President Emmanuel Macron a policy victory that nonetheless exposed cracks in his centrist majority. The bill, a compromise reached between Macron's party and the conservative opposition, illustrates the rightward shift in politics in much of Europe, as governments try to fend off the rise of the far-right by being tougher on immigration. Photo by Eliot Blondet/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Bruno Le Maire leaves after the weekly cabinet meeting at the presidential Elysee Palace in Paris, on December 20, 2023. French lawmakers gave their final approval to a contested bill that toughens rules for immigrants on Tuesday, giving President Emmanuel Macron a policy victory that nonetheless exposed cracks in his centrist majority. The bill, a compromise reached between Macron's party and the conservative opposition, illustrates the rightward shift in politics in much of Europe, as governments try to fend off the rise of the far-right by being tougher on immigration. Photo by Eliot Blondet/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Bruno Le Maire leaves after the weekly cabinet meeting at the presidential Elysee Palace in Paris, on December 20, 2023. French lawmakers gave their final approval to a contested bill that toughens rules for immigrants on Tuesday, giving President Emmanuel Macron a policy victory that nonetheless exposed cracks in his centrist majority. The bill, a compromise reached between Macron's party and the conservative opposition, illustrates the rightward shift in politics in much of Europe, as governments try to fend off the rise of the far-right by being tougher on immigration. Photo by Eliot Blondet/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne leaves after the weekly cabinet meeting at the presidential Elysee Palace in Paris, on December 20, 2023. French lawmakers gave their final approval to a contested bill that toughens rules for immigrants on Tuesday, giving President Emmanuel Macron a policy victory that nonetheless exposed cracks in his centrist majority. The bill, a compromise reached between Macron's party and the conservative opposition, illustrates the rightward shift in politics in much of Europe, as governments try to fend off the rise of the far-right by being tougher on immigration. Photo by Eliot Blondet/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Bruno Le Maire leaves after the weekly cabinet meeting at the presidential Elysee Palace in Paris, on December 20, 2023. French lawmakers gave their final approval to a contested bill that toughens rules for immigrants on Tuesday, giving President Emmanuel Macron a policy victory that nonetheless exposed cracks in his centrist majority. The bill, a compromise reached between Macron's party and the conservative opposition, illustrates the rightward shift in politics in much of Europe, as governments try to fend off the rise of the far-right by being tougher on immigration. Photo by Eliot Blondet/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne, flanked by Junior Minister for Public Accounts Thomas Cazenave (C) and Junior Minister for the Relations with the Parliament Franck Riester (L), leaves after the weekly cabinet meeting at the presidential Elysee Palace in Paris, on December 20, 2023. French lawmakers gave their final approval to a contested bill that toughens rules for immigrants on Tuesday, giving President Emmanuel Macron a policy victory that nonetheless exposed cracks in his centrist majority. The bill, a compromise reached between Macron's party and the conservative opposition, illustrates the rightward shift in politics in much of Europe, as governments try to fend off the rise of the far-right by being tougher on immigration. Photo by Eliot Blondet/ABACAPRESS.COM

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Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Weekly Cabinet Meeting - Paris

Harlem Desir at the presidential Elysee Palace in Paris, on December 20, 2023. French lawmakers gave their final approval to a contested bill that toughens rules for immigrants on Tuesday, giving President Emmanuel Macron a policy victory that nonetheless exposed cracks in his centrist majority. The bill, a compromise reached between Macron's party and the conservative opposition, illustrates the rightward shift in politics in much of Europe, as governments try to fend off the rise of the far-right by being tougher on immigration. Photo by Eliot Blondet/ABACAPRESS.COM

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