The Pak Banker

Iran bank manager fired for serving unveiled woman

- TEHRAN

An Iranian bank manager who served an unveiled woman has been fired, local media reported on Sunday, as demonstrat­ions triggered by the mandatory head covering rule shake the Islamic republic.

Women in the country of more than 80 million people are required to cover their heads, necks and hair, a law enforced by the country’s morality police.

The September 16 death in morality police custody of Mahsa Amini, 22, for allegedly breaching the dress code rules, sparked nationwide demonstrat­ions which authoritie­s call “riots.”

Mehr news agency reported that the bank manager in Qom province, near the capital Tehran, “had provided bank services on Thursday to an unveiled woman.”

As a result, he was “removed from his position by order of the governor,” Mehr quoted deputy governor Ahmad Hajizadeh as saying.

Mehr said video of the unveiled woman “elicited a lot of reaction on social media.”

In Iran most banks are state-controlled and Hajizadeh said it is the responsibi­lity of managers in such institutio­ns to implement the hijab law.

Dozens of people, mainly protesters but also members of the security forces, have been killed during the demonstrat­ions, which Iran says are encouraged by its Western “enemies.”

The hijab became mandatory four years after the 1979 revolution that overthrew the US-backed monarchy and establishe­d the Islamic Republic.

Later, with changing clothing norms, it became commonplac­e to see women in tight jeans and loose, colorful headscarve­s.

But in July this year ultra-conservati­ve President Ebrahim Raisi called for mobilizati­on of “all state institutio­ns to enforce the headscarf law.”

Many women continued to bend the rules, however.

 ?? -REUTERS ?? BERLIN
A demonstrat­or holds a placard during a protest following the death of Mahsa Amini in Iran, in Berlin, Germany.
-REUTERS BERLIN A demonstrat­or holds a placard during a protest following the death of Mahsa Amini in Iran, in Berlin, Germany.

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