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it says that "men typically do not wear tight trousers". but in iran, most men wear extremely tight jeans, since it is popular. Could you give some background? Is that true throughout the country? How has it been impacting the sex segregation?

Laws on Hijab

As far as I know there is no precise law on hijab and it's description and limits. The only law regarding hijab is the only paragraph in penal law mentioned in this article. All the rest are orders by police and official factions responsible for Islamic moralities.

Does anyone has any source on these laws?

Bee (talk) 19:59, 22 January 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Propagandistic lies

I removed this sentence:

Buses are divided into two parts. Men should get on and off through the front door while the back section and back doors are for women. Although the bus services in Iran are sex-segregated, women should remain fully covered while in bus. In other cities such as in Mashhad, males and females were prevented from traveling on the same bus. Traditionally it is not acceptable in Iran for a man to sit or stand beside a non-mahram woman in public places. It is not forbidden for women in Iran to drive cars like in Saudi Arabia, but riding bicycles and motorbikes remains illegal. It is also forbidden for women to be alone in a car with a non-mahram man.

Now check:

Obviously, someone has tried to spread anti-Iranian propaganda. --109.60.17.216 (talk) 23:29, 28 May 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Removal of content

  • BBC states there's so-called "bad hijab law". It's nonsense, there is official Majlis website and such media claims can not be confirmed.
  • MEMRI isn't reliable source, it's infamous for false citations.
  • Claims like there's sex segregation in schools, libraries, cafes, restaurants, hairdressers or sport halls is absurd, not even parliament applies it. --HistorNE (talk) 01:09, 13 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]