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The Guidance Patrol (Persian: گشت ارشاد, romanized: gašt-e eršâd) or morality police is an Islamic religious police force and vice squad in the Law Enforcement Command of the Islamic Republic of Iran. Its primary role is to enforce Sharia law as defined by Iranian legislation, with a particular focus on ensuring compliance with Islamic dress codes, such as mandating that women wear a hijab. Established in 2005 as the successor to the Islamic Revolution Committees, the Guidance Patrol reports directly to the Supreme Leader.
History
Since the 1979 Iranian Islamic Revolution, Iranian law has required that all women in Iran wear a hijab that covers their head and neck, and conceals their hair.
In the 1980s, the Islamic Revolution Committees served the function of the Islamic religious police in Iran. In 2005, the Guidance Patrol became its successor organization. The Guidance Patrol reports directly to the Supreme Leader of Iran.
On 2013's Iranian Mother's Day, the patrols rewarded women wearing chādor (the preferred hijab style) with flowers.
According to Iran's Interior Minister, in a three-month period in 2014, 220 thousand women were taken to police stations, and signed statements in which they promised to wear a hijab. A further 19,000 were given a hair-covering notice, and 9,000 were detained. Additionally, in 2014, the police additionally gave warnings and guidance to 3.6 million other Iranians who failed to follow the Islamic dress code.
In 2015, in an eight-month period, police in Tehran stopped 40,000 women who were driving for not obeying Islamic rules of proper dress, and impounded the cars of most of them, generally for a week. In 2016, Tehran used 7,000 undercover Guidance Patrol officers to catch violators of the Islamic dress code.
= Mahsa Amini controversy
=A major controversy concerning the Guidance Patrol was its arrest and alleged killing of Mahsa Amini. On September 13, 2022, the Guidance Patrol arrested Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian woman, for allegedly wearing her hijab improperly, in a manner that allowed some of her hair to be visible under her hijab. She died in custody three days later. The official cause of death was heart failure, but bruises on her legs and face suggested to many that she had been beaten, despite police denials. Multiple medical officials and detainees that witnessed her arrest claim that Guidance Patrol officials tortured her in the back of a van before arriving at the station. Her detention and subsequent death inspired a wave of protests in Iran, including at Tehran University and at Kasra Hospital, where she died.
Amini's death sparked major protests, "unlike any the country had seen before", the "biggest challenge" to the government, with an unknown organization starting riots around the country, leaving 10,000s arrested and over 500 killed. (Including many Guidance Patrol officers killed and tortured) During the protests against the hijab requirements and the Iranian government in general in late 2022, enforcement of compulsory hijab was relaxed, and there was even an erroneous report that it would be disbanded.
The morality police in Iran are responsible for ensuring compliance with the country's compulsory dress code laws. As of September 2023, a morality crackdown is in process.
The list of punishments for women who disobey the dress code keeps intensifying. Hefty fines, banking restrictions, business closures, jail time, forced labour and travel bans. Being diagnosed as mentally ill.
In mid-July 2023, after months of a large fraction of younger Iranian women ignoring compulsory hijab, and just before the start of the holy month of Muharram, a spokesman for Iranian law enforcement formally announced that the morality police would return to the streets. (On July 15, the day of their returned to the streets, widespread internet outages were observed).
= Armita Geravand incident
=In October 2023, a 17-year-old Iranian girl, Armita Geravand, fell into coma and was declared brain dead after an alleged encounter with morality police officers. The incident sparked outrage and criticism from human rights groups and social media users, who compared it to the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022. Iran denied that Geravand was harmed by the officers and said her condition was due to a pre-existing illness.
Timeline
July 2024 police shutdown Turkish Airlines after the workers resisted police order to cover their hair with headscarf.
Activities
Guidance patrols usually consist of a van with a male crew accompanied by chador-clad women who stand at busy public places (e.g., shopping centers, squares, and subway stations), (sometimes assisted by Basij paramilitary), to arrest women not wearing hijabs or not wearing them in accordance with government standards. According to Amnesty International, "girls as young as seven years old" are forced to wear the hijab. The United Nations Human Rights Office said young Iranian women were violently slapped in the face, beaten with batons, and pushed into police vans. The women are driven to a correctional facility or police station, lectured on how to dress, have their photos taken by the police and personal information recorded, are required to destroy any "indecent" clothing with scissors, and generally released to relatives the same day, though many are detained. Under Article 683 of Iran's Islamic Penal Code, the penalty for a woman not wearing the hijab consists of imprisonment from 10 days to two months, and a fine of 50,000 to 500,000 Iranian rials (worth approx. $1.20 to $11.90 USD in 2024). Violators may also be lashed up to 74 times.
The Guidance Patrol also monitors immodest attire by men, "Western-style" haircuts worn by men, male-female fraternization, violations of restrictions on the wearing of makeup, the wearing of bright colours, tight clothing, torn jeans, and short trousers, and of trans women. Violations include too much hair showing from under the headscarf, and an unmarried couple taking a walk together. Trans women have been harassed for lack of gender conformity. When an Iranian trans woman was beaten in April 2018, police refused to help her.
Members of the public may turn one another in for perceived violations of the dress code, and traffic cameras are also used to identify violators of the dress code. Iran's CCTV camera systems, including those from cafes, universities, and kindergartens, transmit their footage to the police.
On 27 December 2017, Brigadier General Hossein Rahimi, head of the Greater Tehran police, said: "According to the commander of the NAJA, those who do not observe Islamic values and have negligence in this area will no longer be taken to detention centers, a legal case will not be made for them, and we will not send them to court; rather, education classes to reform their behavior will be offered."
= Sanctions
=On 22 September 2022, during the Mahsa Amini protests, the United States Department of the Treasury announced sanctions against the Guidance Patrol as well as seven senior leaders of Iran's various security organizations, "for violence against protestors and the death of Mahsa Amini". These include Mohammad Rostami Cheshmeh Gachi, chief of Iran's Morality Police, Haj Ahmad Mirzaei, head of the Tehran division of the Morality Police, and other Iranian security officials. The sanctions involve blocking any properties or interests in property within the jurisdiction of the U.S., and reporting them to the U.S. Treasury. Penalties would be imposed on any parties that facilitate transactions or provide services to sanctioned entities.
On 26 September 2022, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stated that the Government of Canada would impose sanctions on the Guidance Patrol, its leadership, and the officials responsible for the death of Mahsa Amini and the crackdown on protesters.
2024 Nour program
In April 2024, two years after the beginning of the Women, Life, Freedom movement, the Iranian government ordered more violent morality patrols. A partially implemented secret and classified chastity program law aims to prevent women who do not wear the hijab from leaving the country. VOA reported that before the 2024 Islamic Consultative Assembly elections, authorities had encouraged non-hijab-wearing individuals to vote, but later adopted a "factory reset" approach after the elections. The police began issuing penalty notices via a mobile app for unveiled women in vehicles, with fines automatically deducted from citizens' bank accounts. Additionally, the government has routinely closed public cafes and restaurants.
In June, the police deployed 7,000 troops to the beaches to enforce the hijab.
In August 2024, CCTV footage posted online showed hijab Nour program police severely beating two teenage girls on the street and taking them away.
2024 Tuba program
In August 2024, Minister of Islamic Culture and guidance ordered 1500 missionary personnel for hijab and chastity to be employed and trained by government called Mujahideen Fatimi.
Religious differences of opinion
Some officials say that in their view the Guidance Patrol is an Islamic religious police, fulfilling the Islamic obligation to Enjoining good and forbidding wrong, and is desired by the people. Others oppose the Guidance Patrol's existence on the grounds that the authorities should respect citizens' freedom and dignity, and enforce Iranian law but not enforce Islam. The Guidance Patrol has been called un-Islamic by some, mostly because performing the requisites is haram (forbidden) when it leads to sedition. Some argue the notion should be a mutual obligation, allowing people to instruct government officials, but in practise it is strictly limited to one side.
Alleged dissolution
The Attorney General of Iran, Mohammad Jafar Montazeri, stated in Qom on 3 December 2022 that the police Guidance Patrol is not under the supervision of the judiciary system and was in the process of being disbanded. He also said that the hijab law is under review. However, as of 5 December the Iranian government had not made any official confirmation regarding the disbanding of the guidance patrol, and the Iranian state media denied its dissolution. It was reported that enforcement of the mandatory hijab and the guidance patrol had intensified, particularly in religious cities. In response, a three-day general strike was called by protestors, with shopkeepers closing their businesses; several experts and protestors alleged that the news of the dissolution had been announced by the Iranian government to overshadow coverage of the strike. Iranian state-run Arabic language channel Al Alam News Network denied any dissolution of the Guidance Patrol and added that "the maximum impression that can be taken" from Montazeri's comment is that the morality police and his branch of government, the judiciary, are unrelated. On July 16, 2023, the Iranian law enforcement force announced that patrols by the Morality Police would be relaunched.
See also
Committee for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice (Gaza Strip)
Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice (Saudi Arabia)
Iranian protests against compulsory hijab
Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice (Afghanistan)
Mahsa Amini, Kurdish Iranian woman who died in police custody after being arrested for an alleged breach of modesty laws, causing mass protests in the country
Zahra Bani Yaghoub, Iranian woman who died in police custody after being arrested for an alleged breach of modesty laws
Homa Darabi, Iranian woman known for her self-immolation protesting the compulsory hijab
Reza Zarei, former chief of Tehran Police in charge of the Guidance Patrol who was found in a house of prostitution, was arrested, and lost his post
Notes
References
External links
Media related to Guidance Patrol at Wikimedia Commons
Travis Beard (April 1, 2008). "Hair Police; It’s only recently that Iranian men have become the target of ultraconservative, style-cramping campaigns," Vice.
"Who are Iran’s hated morality police?; They are a recent innovation, not a core tenet of Islam," The Economist, September 26, 2022.
Pardis Mahdavi (September 26, 2022). "Opinion; When Iran’s ‘morality police’ came for me," The Washington Post.
"The history of Iran's so-called morality police," NPR, September 30, 2022 (audio).