From street crackdowns to televised sermons, Iran’s hardline officials have turned women’s exposed midriffs into a new battleground in the fight over compulsory hijab—revealing how deeply they fear women’s agency over their own bodies.
The struggle between Iranian women and the defenders of compulsory hijab — backed by state media platforms, clerical power, and security forces on the streets — has moved beyond hair.
In recent months, men aligned with the Islamic Republic have begun attacking what they call women’s “belly-button display,” treating it as a new sign of defiance.
As the government tightens pressure through campaigns such as the “Chastity and Hijab Situation Room,” reportedly supported by more than 80,000 morality enforcers, pro-establishment theorists have escalated their rhetoric.
Their comments reveal how unsettled they are by the idea that women might freely decide what to wear—something many women’s rights activists see as the first step toward true freedom.
In one of the most controversial remarks, Hassan Rahimpour Azghadi, a member of the Supreme Council of the Cultural Revolution, shifted a panel on the 12-day war between Iran and Israel toward hijab enforcement.
“There was a time when the hijab problem was just hair. Now you walk down the street and you see both babes and belly buttons!" he said.
Before him, former parliament vice-speaker Ali Motahari—another outspoken defender of compulsory hijab—criticized President Masoud Pezeshkian’s government, accusing it of promoting “immodesty.”
He, too, singled out visible belly buttons: “Yes, we say there shouldn’t be excessive policing, but who is supposed to stop a woman who walks around with her navel exposed?”
A closer look at such remarks shows that, although framed as concern over hijab, they are really about policing women’s bodies—revealing how the Islamic Republic treats the female body as a political symbol and a measure of the Islamic Republic’s religious authority.
This view stands in direct opposition to women’s basic freedoms.
Using body details to alarm conservatives
Videos and photos circulating this spring and summer showed young women in restaurants, shopping malls, and city streets wearing crop tops and short shirts—sharing moments of leisure that openly challenge state dress codes.
In one case, after a user on X called women in crop tops “shameless,” dozens of women responded by posting their own photos in midriff-revealing clothes—many smiling or posing casually, as if to say nothing is wrong with this.
These images show younger Iranian women confidently wearing the latest fashion trends, much like their peers elsewhere.
A feminist activist in Tehran, who asked to be identified as Bita for security reasons, told Iran International that focusing on “navel exposure” is a strategy to provoke conservative audiences and brand the clothing as morally corrupt.
She believes the growing visibility of such outfits helps normalize women’s freedom to choose their dress—something the authorities see as a direct threat.
Constant control and a Gen. Z that refuses to comply
The rapid spread of this fashion after the Woman, Life, Freedom movement is widely seen as a generational revolt. Generation Z, backed by Millennials, is rejecting decades of state-enforced modesty rules—and not just on clothing, but on women’s rights more broadly.
Yet the Islamic Republic appears unwilling to learn from past failures. Women’s rights advocates say that every time officials publicly attack women’s “body exposure,” they are signaling to the state to escalate repression.
In this mindset, women are not viewed as citizens with agency, but as bodies to be controlled. Once a woman is reduced to a body, attention is redirected to hair, navel, clothing—never her autonomy.
The result is a taboo culture that sexualizes women’s bodies instead of normalizing them.
Bita says the government’s old methods of control are no longer effective: “This generation wants to break forced norms. That is exactly what Iranian society needed.”
What comes next?
Since its founding, the Islamic Republic has turned the female body—especially through hijab enforcement—into a projection of state power and ideology. That makes it unlikely the clerical establishment will voluntarily step back. Crackdowns are expected to continue.
But the growing presence of young women in public wearing crop tops suggests they are not backing down either. They appear determined to normalize their presence in society, despite the state’s attempt to portray them as a sexual threat or symbol of social disorder.
Another woman inside Iran who writes about women’s rights on X told Iran International: “In a patriarchal, ideological system like the Islamic Republic, controlling women’s clothing is a way to protect male authority and suppress progressive movements like Woman, Life, Freedom."
"By removing hijab, women are not just protesting dress codes—they are protesting the entire system.”
From this perspective, if the Islamic Republic stops policing women’s bodies, it must begin recognizing them as full social actors—something that would require sharing power. That is why the issue is not really about hair or belly buttons. It is about power.
Bita ends with a warning: “We women know that if we step back even once, the Islamic Republic will take ten steps forward.”
Iran’s hardline newspaper Kayhan, which operates under the supervision of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, has warned that the growing tolerance toward unveiled women has now extended to “semi-nudity,” accusing officials of neglecting to uphold the country’s hijab laws.
In a commentary published on Saturday under the title Hijab and the Second Step, Shariatmadari said some authorities were publicly condemning “semi-nudity” among women while neglecting to reaffirm that unveiling itself remains prohibited. “It is as if unveiling has been removed from the list of forbidden acts,” he wrote, “and officials only caution against full or partial nudity.”
“This is exactly the enemy’s second-step tactic,” he added.
Shariatmadari described the approach as part of a deliberate psychological strategy to desensitize society. “When society suffers from a harmful phenomenon, the enemy seeks to normalize it by introducing an even more disastrous version,” he wrote. “In this case, they present semi-nudity so that people tolerate unveiling.”
Since the 2022 death of Mahsa Amini in the custody of Iran’s morality police, enforcing compulsory hijab has become increasingly difficult, and the state’s ability to impose the rules has sharply eroded, particularly in major cities.
Since then, many women have continued to appear unveiled in public despite warnings, fines, and the return of hijab patrol vans, turning defiance into a daily act of resistance.
‘Officials still playing in the enemy’s field’
The Kayhan editor also repeated his long-standing criticism of the government’s handling of the hijab and chastity law, calling the legislation “suspicious” and “likely designed by infiltrators.” He said it “not only fails to stop unveiling but will expand it,” accusing the heads of Iran’s three branches of government of “preventing even the implementation of this incomplete law.”
Shariatmadari cited Khamenei’s earlier remarks that foreign enemies had deliberately turned the hijab issue into a political conflict. “They want to return the country to the pre-revolutionary state,” he wrote.
Addressing “semi-nudity” without confronting unveiling itself would embolden those seeking to erode Islamic values, he concluded. “Nudity is the result and continuation of unveiling,” he said. “Fighting it cannot succeed without a serious confrontation with unveiling.”
Oil industry contract workers gathered outside Iran’s presidential office in Tehran on Saturday to protest what they said were unfulfilled government promises to eliminate private contractors and secure direct employment with state energy companies.
Workers, who had traveled from oil-producing provinces to the capital, said the administration of President Masoud Pezeshkian had failed to deliver on its commitments to improve their job status and pay. Protesters chanted slogans including, “Enough with the promises – our tables are empty,” as they called for the government to honor pledges made earlier this year.
They cited Pezeshkian’s promises to abolish intermediary contracting firms, convert contract positions into permanent ones, and implement an equal pay system for all workers across the oil ministry’s subsidiaries. “These promises remain only on paper,” protesters said, adding that the result has been “continued discrimination and job insecurity for thousands of experienced workers.”
Workers demand direct employment
The demonstrators urged the government to sign direct contracts with oil workers rather than outsourcing them through third-party companies. They said contract employees, who perform the industry’s core operational work, have been excluded from key benefits and protections enjoyed by officially contracted staff. “The main burden of the oil industry lies on our shoulders, but we are denied fair pay and job security,” they said.
Organizers warned that if their demands are not met by the end of November 2025, they will expand their protests, holding weekly demonstrations outside the presidential office from December onward. They vowed to continue until the government delivers on its pledges to standardize pay and eliminate intermediary contractors.
Broader labor unrest
The Tehran protest followed other recent labor actions across Iran’s energy and industrial sectors. Electricity distribution workers from several provinces, including Ahvaz, joined the oil demonstrators to demand improved job conditions.
Separately, petrochemical workers in Chovar, Ilam province, staged their second protest in a week over low wages and what they described as management indifference to their living conditions. In September, steel workers at the National Iranian Steel Industrial Group in Ahvaz also held strikes over unpaid wages and job insecurity.
Workers in the Pars Special Economic Energy Zone in Assaluyeh have likewise pressed for fair pay and formal employment status, showing the persistence of labor unrest across Iran’s key energy hubs.
Iran has told Telegram that a years-long ban on the messaging app will be lifted only if it agrees to cooperate with the judiciary and follow new oversight rules, state media reported on Saturday.
Mehr news agency said Iranian negotiators presented several conditions to Telegram during talks held this week. The terms include assisting judicial authorities with domestic legal requests, removing content reported by users, blocking posts that promote ethnic tensions or terrorism, and ensuring user data is not shared with foreign intelligence services.
The discussions are being led by the communications ministry under a directive from the Supreme Council of Cyberspace, which authorized talks with foreign platforms, Mehr said.
Meanwhile, on Thursday, the Fars news agency, which is affiliated with the Revolutionary Guards, said no vote had been taken by a government committee on lifting bans on Telegram, YouTube and Instagram. It said decisions on foreign platforms must follow a 32-point plan approved by President Masoud Pezeshkian.
The plan, which earlier led to the unblocking of WhatsApp and Google Play, requires foreign companies to accept Iran’s digital sovereignty and comply with domestic law.
Lawmakers have said all parts of the plan must be completed before Telegram’s case can move forward. Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said each stage should be implemented in order before reviewing the app’s status, according to Fars.
Telegram has been blocked in Iran since 2018 after officials said it was used to organize protests. Despite the ban, millions of Iranians continue to use the app through virtual private networks.
A recent government survey found that only 2.4 percent of users are “very satisfied” with internet quality and that more than 80 percent rely on VPNs to access blocked platforms. Officials say restrictions are needed for national security, while critics say censorship has hurt small businesses and public communication. Telegram has not commented publicly on the reported talks.
Iran recorded more than 20,000 road deaths in the past year, marking the highest toll in more than a decade, an official of the country’s forensics authority said on Thursday.
The sharp rise, officials say, reverses ten years of gradual decline in traffic deaths and reflects the country’s worsening vehicle safety, outdated road networks, and weak enforcement of driving standards.
The figure broke a ten-year record, with fatalities exceeding 20,000 for the first time since 2011, Abbas Masjedi, head of the Legal Medicine Organization, told Dideban Iran.
“Unfortunately, last year, for the first time in ten years, we recorded more than 20,000 deaths caused by traffic accidents,” Masjedi said. “During the previous decade, the figure always stayed below that mark. After the pandemic, travel increased again, and the number of deaths rose as a result,” he said.
Nearly half a million people, Masjedi added, were injured in crashes last year, with 7 to 10 percent suffering permanent disabilities. He described the losses as “a heavy burden on the national healthcare system and public funds,” estimating that the lifetime cost per serious injury could reach 90 billion rials (nearly $90,000).
Road safety analysts attribute the surge not only to driver error but also to systemic failures – notably the poor quality of domestically produced vehicles and long-neglected accident-prone roads. Studies have shown that Iranian-made cars routinely fail crash safety standards, turning even minor collisions into deadly incidents.
Large sections of Iran’s intercity network, particularly the northern and southern corridors, lack basic safety features such as guardrails, lighting, and warning signs, according to the Legal Medicine Organization. Urban centers like Tehran, where traffic density is among the highest in the region, also account for a growing share of fatal accidents.
Preventive spending urged
Masjedi urged authorities to redirect more funding from emergency response to prevention, including upgrading road infrastructure and improving vehicle safety.
“Investment in prevention is worth every rial,” Masjedi said. “If we fix these dangerous points and improve vehicle quality, we can save thousands of lives each year.”
The latest figures highlight the human and economic toll of road accidents in Iran, where transport safety has long lagged behind international standards despite repeated government pledges to reduce fatalities by 10 percent annually.
Iran’s ban on Halloween celebrations has turned plastic pumpkins into symbols of defiance, exposing deeper tensions over culture, joy and control in a nation long haunted by the politics of morality.
Enthusiasm for Western-style festivities has quietly grown in Iran over the past decade.
Despite frequent crackdowns, cafés and restaurants in Tehran and other cities have increasingly hosted Christmas and Valentine’s events, with shopfronts displaying seasonal decorations once unseen in the Islamic Republic.
Halloween observance has gathered pace along with its popularity with children and teenagers.
"This year, all the cafes and restaurants in Mehrshahr have decorated for Halloween in such a way that it feels like I should just wait for the kids to show up at our door soon and say 'Trick or treat!'" one user posted on X, referring to a district in norther Iran.
In 2023, the government-run Borna News outlet reported that some private elementary schools in affluent north Tehran had held discreet Halloween gatherings.
Parents told the outlet that teachers had requested pumpkins and other items to hold Halloween parties on school grounds. The report added that much of the paraphernalia was imported, but some was produced in “underground workshops.”
So when Iran’s Chamber of Guilds announced an official ban on “any and all Halloween festivities” this week, it sounded almost comical to many.
The directive warned that “ceremonies, gatherings, advertising or the sale” of items related to Halloween were prohibited in all public and business venues.
The move, it said, aimed to protect “cultural, religious, and social values.”
Reports on social media suggest that many cafés and restaurants quickly cancelled their planned Halloween events after the warning.
In the southern city of Ahvaz, Mohammad Lari described taking his child to an amusement park that had organized a Halloween-themed play event.
“I took the kid to one of those play venues. A bunch of wild people showed up, upsetting the kids and families because of the Halloween theme,” he wrote on X, in apparent reference to morality police. “People got so upset it would’ve turned into a fight if there weren't a few sane people around.”
The Chamber’s notice came only days after cafés and small shops in Tehran’s traditional bazaars had filled their windows with ghost masks and orange décor.
Many had already launched Halloween-themed menus and cakes before the ban took effect, hoping to take advantage of consumer demand for a fresh new holiday as sanctions and mismanagement have driven up costs of living and hit sales.
Backlash and online ridicule
The announcement triggered an immediate outcry online, reviving debates over the state’s priorities as hardships mount.
Mihan Media, a dissident Instagram account, mocked the order, describing it as "a move that perfectly captures the Islamic Republic’s fear of plastic pumpkins and fake spiderwebs."
"The regime, ever vigilant against witches, ghouls and Western consumerism, seems to have concluded that a few teenagers in costume pose a greater threat to Iran’s moral order than corruption, inflation or repression."
“While the world laughs at imaginary monsters," it added," the Islamic Republic is busy chasing imaginary cultural ones — proving that nothing frightens it more than joy itself.”
On X, many used irony to highlight the country’s economic hardship.
“They say holding Halloween celebrations is forbidden and will be dealt with," user Alireza Yahyaei wrote.
"In a country where buying a home is impossible (for many), even if one saves for it for a century, and food inflation is at 100%, is there even a need for Halloween? The nightmare the world celebrates in one night, we live every day!”
Others pointed to Iran’s cultural contradictions. Sadegh Maktabi, a teacher, wrote: “Iranian society is the strangest collage in the world; one day it celebrates the birth of Hazrat Zaynab (graddaughter of the Prophet Muhammad), the next morning it honors Cyrus (the Great), and at night it celebrates Halloween."
"Islamism, nationalism and Westernism, all together,” he added.