1
Law::
(since the culmination of the Islamic Revolution in Iran, ie February 11, 1979) organized government-led crusade against canonically sinful and immoral acts or omission of certain religious musts, esp when committed (or omitted) in public places and city streets, the most common form of those sins in the post-revolution Iran being loose hijab, that is (in the case of women) exposed or partly exposed hair, wearing tight-fitting dresses without a loose-fitting conventional overall or rupush, wearing garments or rupush with conspicuously gay colors, including also any behavior, on the part of the female gender, at city streets and public places that might be construed as solicitation or seduction of the opposite sex or as reception to sexual advances by a male passerby, as well as blatantly heavy makeup. The strictness of these rules often vary in time, occasion, and place, and is, up to some degree, at the pleasure and discretion of the Guardians of Chastity that are usually combined teams of both genders, with female members always wearing full hijab or chador and having benefit of specially-marked vans parked at curbsides in which to which to speak in privy with offenders or carry them off to police stations from where they may be sent to courts with jurisdiction on moral and canonical issues of that category.
فرهنگ تشریحی - کاربردی حقوق تالیف هرمز رشدیه