Los Angeles Times

Iran reinforcin­g social media ‘modesty’

As more people go online during the pandemic, authoritie­s are cracking down on ‘deviant’ behavior.

- By Melissa Etehad Times staff writer Etehad reported from Los Angeles. A special correspond­ent in Tehran contribute­d to this report.

TEHRAN — Reihane Taravati, a Tehran resident, knows all too well the dangers involved in posting videos and photos on social media sites in Iran.

The 29-year-old social media influencer has been arrested twice in recent years for uploading what authoritie­s claim to be inappropri­ate content to YouTube and Instagram.

In 2014, Taravati received a suspended jail sentence for posting a video on YouTube of herself and a few friends dancing to Pharrell Williams’ feel-good hit “Happy.” They were part of a wave of young people in the Islamic Republic who had joined a worldwide movement of youths making videos of themselves dancing to the catchy tune. In some of the videos, the women wore headscarve­s toward the back of their heads, revealing some hair in the front.

She was arrested again last June for posting photos on Instagram that showed her without a headscarf, again breaking Iran’s modesty laws that require women to cover their hair. She was released soon after and received another suspended jail sentence.

Now, as more people go online while sheltering at home in the midst of Iran’s second wave of the coronaviru­s, women such as Taravati are concerned that they may be punished for recent content on Instagram and other social media sites.

“I’m worried that they may arrest me again,” she told The Times.

Taravati has been posting photos of herself without a headscarf and workout videos on Instagram. “During the quarantine period, my activities on Instagram tripled,” she said. “And my followers’ numbers have jumped lately as well.”

Since 2009, Iranian women have been required by the Computer Crimes Law to adhere to strict guidelines for online conduct, including what they can wear. But in the years since, authoritie­s have been inconsiste­nt in defining what constitute­s “deviant” online behavior and also in enforcing their rules.

In May, Iranian Cyber Police Chief Turaj Kazemi told the state-run Asre Pouya news agency that women violated Iran’s cyber laws if they appeared on social media without a headscarf.

That officials are now doubling down on the rules reflects the Islamic Republic’s latest tactic in an ongoing battle in which hard-line, conservati­ve Islamic clerics seek to reduce the influence of “Western culture.” Most citizens yearn for Iran to join the global stage more than four decades after the revolution that turned it into a strict Islamic theocracy.

Human right activists estimate that more than 250 Iranians have been arrested in recent months for posting photos on Instagram that are said to violate the requiremen­t that women cover their hair.

In the last week alone, at least half a dozen people in cities across Iran were arrested for violating the social media law.

Five were detained in Hormozgan, a southern province, for “publishing pictures of a young couple’s wedding party on their Instagram account,” according to a statement made by Col. Saeed Shafiei, the social deputy of the law enforcemen­t agency in Hormozgan.

On June 3, several people in the northeaste­rn religious city of Mashhad were arrested for posting pictures that authoritie­s described as “vulgar and norm-breaking” on an Instagram account with more than 700,000 followers, according to the semioffici­al Fars News Agency.

With more people taking to social media since March, the crackdown has left more Iranians vulnerable to government­al whims.

“It is ridiculous that at the time of spreading coronaviru­s in the country, their priority is our hijab on Instagram,” Taravati said.

Even well-known actors and athletes are not immune.

In May, an Iranian parkour athlete — a sport that involves jumping from highrise buildings and hanging off cliffs — wound up in jail after he shared a photo of himself kissing a woman on a rooftop. The Instagram post by Alireza Japalaghy was captioned “Tehran dawn.”

The arrest warrant was issued by judiciary officials in mid-May after the image went viral. The pair were accused of “advocating vice,” according to the news agency Tasnim.

“There is no difference between crimes in the real world and those on cyberspace,” Ramin Pashaei, social deputy of Iran’s Cyber Police, told Borna news agency recently.

About 63 million Iranians have an Instagram account, according to Reza Misaghi, chief executive at the Tehran-based tech company Showrand. Misaghi said the number of Iranians using Instagram during the early days of the nation’s coronaviru­s lockdown increased by about 31%. He added that some users increased their use by 400% and that the most popular posters were often women.

“The Instagram market provides many opportunit­ies for Iranian women in various aspects,” Misaghi said. “Many female influencer­s make money from their accounts.”

In September 2014, Taravati, sentenced along with five others, received a suspended sentence of 12 months in prison and 91 lashes.

Although it isn’t illegal to sing and dance in private in Iran, men and especially women are typically barred from doing so in public. Such activities, according to conservati­ves, run contrary to Islamic ideals for modesty in behavior and attire.

Sahar Mohammad, a 32year-old singer, was jailed for posting a video clip on Instagram of herself singing. “There is no opportunit­y for Iranian female singers to work with companies, and we have many obstacles to show our art. In this regard, Instagram has provided this opportunit­y to us,” Mohammad said.

“About five years ago, our band published some songs. For that, we appeared before a court and then were banned for what they called breaking the taboo.”

Some Iranian female influencer­s working in fashion and beauty have left Iran after being banned from any activity on Instagram.

“I have not posted any photo not having my hijab on, but many Instagramm­ers including a few of my friends are under pressure for the hijab-less photos they have posted,” said Parisa Pourtaheri­an, a 29-yearold sports photograph­er with 25,000 followers on Instagram.

“I’ve been obsessed with millions of questions lately. Iranian females are not allowed access to stadiums, and our phones and social media accounts are monitored,” she said.

“They sneak into every bit of our lives. I have no idea what is going to happen to us.”

‘It is ridiculous that at the time of ... coronaviru­s in the country, their priority is our hijab on Instagram.’ — Reihane Taravati, social media influencer

 ?? Vahid Salemi Associated Press ?? IRANIAN women outside a shopping mall in Tehran. Women have been subject to guidelines for online conduct, including what they can wear, and risk arrest if they post images of themselves without headscarve­s.
Vahid Salemi Associated Press IRANIAN women outside a shopping mall in Tehran. Women have been subject to guidelines for online conduct, including what they can wear, and risk arrest if they post images of themselves without headscarve­s.

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