[Excerpt: Following stiff resistance to the measures, however, the
unpopular right wing appears to have shifted tactics. With presidential
elections looming in June, hard-liners will take advantage of discontent
over the failure of reformist President Mohammed Khatami to deliver
fully on promises of freedom, openness, and the rule of law.....But they
appear to have made another calculation as well - that social
flexibility is a price they must pay for their political survival.]

http://209.64.62.42/2005/0415/p01s04-wome.html

from the April 15, 2005 edition

Iran eases its social strictures
In a political trade-off, leaders loosen harsh rules
By Scott Peterson | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
TEHRAN, IRAN – Stuck in traffic, the young driver with goatee, shades,
and a roving eye spots his targets - two lanes over. Oozing
self-confidence, he rolls down his window and motions to the passenger
in the next car to roll down both his windows, so he can deliver his
pickup line directly.

The women, coiffed in head scarves, peered across at their suitor.
Unmoved, they drive on.
        
"Oh well, I guess they weren't interested," laments Siavash, ending
another attempt at a secret liaison in Iran, where official limits on
male-female contact have turned even traffic lanes into passion-laced
zones.

Siavash is a college graduate who spends his days fulfilling his
military duty. But after hours, he takes full advantage of an unexpected
softening of social strictures in the Islamic state - describing quiet
streets where young men "park" cars with girlfriends and parties where
drugs and alcohol are increasingly common.

Social freedoms have long been a barometer of politics in Iran, and
pundits predicted that conservatives would crack down when they regained
control of parliament in February 2004.

Hard-liners and undercover morality police have tried to legislate a
stricter dress code, and last spring stepped up efforts to crash
mixed-sex parties, arrest girls showing too much ankle and wearing
make-up, and scold those resting sunglasses on their heads. Mobile
flogging units were even reportedly deployed in more laid-back Caspian
Coast towns.

Change in tactics

Following stiff resistance to the measures, however, the unpopular right
wing appears to have shifted tactics. With presidential elections
looming in June, hard-liners will take advantage of discontent over the
failure of reformist President Mohammed Khatami to deliver fully on
promises of freedom, openness, and the rule of law.

But they appear to have made another calculation as well - that social
flexibility is a price they must pay for their political survival.

Pushing too hard on social restrictions, estimates political analyst and
businessman Saeed Laylaz, is one of the three things that could
destabilize Iran - along with a severe drop in oil prices or missteps in
the dispute over Iran's nuclear program. Several years of rising hopes
for change, and the subsequent deflation of those hopes, has turned a
sizable group of Iranians, more than two-thirds of whom are under 30
years old, away from politics.

Now what many want is simply to be left alone.

"The regime allows people to do what they want, so the army of the
people has returned to its bases," says Mr. Laylaz, adding that the
"triumph" of Mr. Khatami has been that many freedoms are now
irreversible anyway.

"Maybe [people] do not like the regime, but they don't hate it," he
continues. "They are home, awaiting a new confrontation, over the
economy or culture.... They don't accept totalitarianism anymore, and
the regime accepts this."

That equation is clear to Siavash, who asked that a pseudonym be used
because he is still serving in the military.

"The conservatives are getting clever - people are free in the street,
holding hands and wearing less hijab [hair covering]," says the young
man. "[They] want to show that voting for reformists is not going to
solve your problems."

Siavash adds that pressure from outside - especially Washington - helps.

"As long as there is a foreign gun to our heads, we feel safe [from
harassment] here. The government needs our support, so we will be more
free," he says.

The current relaxation could not be more evident, from a bestselling
volume that defines coded slang for women used by highway date-hunters
like Siavash, to young women in skin-tight, thigh-length "Islamic"
manteau jackets who download erotic images from the Internet for their
mobile phones.

But there are limits, and the more political realms are as tightly
controlled as ever. Internet bloggers have been a particular target of
prosecution in the past year. Many of those convicted describe prison
time marked by brutal treatment and torture.

Scenes of mixed-sex frolicking in February during the Ashura religious
holiday, which mourns the death of Imam Hussein, also brought religious
ire against "a handful of hoodlums and promiscuous elements," in the
words of the hard-line Jomhuri-e Eslami newspaper.

"In this disgraceful event, which was like a large street party, [girls
and boys] mocked Muslims' beliefs and sanctities in the most shameless
manner," the newspaper wrote, according to Reuters. "Some long-haired
guys would openly cuddle girls creating awful immoral scenes. Fast,
provocative music ... nearby gave the street party more steam."
Hard-line vigilantes broke up that gathering in affluent north Tehran.

I need socks?

But the hard line can appear unexpectedly as well. One young woman
recalls how she was prevented last fall from flying from Tehran to
London because, beneath her long black manteau robe, she was not wearing
socks.

The woman, who asked not to be named, usually wears mascara, plucks her
eyebrows, and even kisses male friends on the cheek when meeting on the
street - an extraordinary risk, even now. But she had taken the
precaution of looking as conservative as possible for the airport exit.

"This is the Iran we live in - they are so rude," she says. Female
airport officials slapped on handcuffs and took her to a nearby court to
sign documents.

"Where does it say in the Koran you must wear socks?" the woman asked,
incredulous.

"You're going to say you are sorry, in court," came the uncompromising
reply. The young culprit with the bare ankles was given a choice of
punishments: $150 fine, 100 lashings, or two months in prison. Her
mother arrived to bail her out - uncharacteristically dressed in a full
black chador and wearing no makeup - and pleaded that the family (though
actually well-to-do) "did not have enough money for socks," and were "a
Basiji family" - staunch supporters of the revolution.

She paid in cash - and became another example of the deep conservatism
underlying the current social permissiveness on the streets.

Indeed, just as some conservatives have lowered their sights, in terms
of molding a restive population, many youths have also adjusted their
expectations in a grudging acknowledgement, even accommodation, of
hard-line forces in Iran.

Among the newly tempered youths is Alireza Mahfouzian, a 25-year-old
whom the Monitor first met five years ago on ski slopes of Dizin, not
far from Tehran.

Back then, he was pushing the envelope, putting his arm around the
shoulders of his then-girlfriend, Golnar, and even giving her a quick
kiss before they sliced their way down the snowpack.

Many girlfriends later, and now running an interior-decoration business
that puts him in contact with typical Iranians, Mr. Mahfouzian is a
changed man. He remains a party animal, just a more circumspect one.

"We must realize we live in an Islamic country - we should accept that
the [leaders] have their own tools to push," says the heavyset
Mahfouzian, stroking a close-trimmed goatee. "I understand this is their
way of imposing power."

The Khatami era has meant that "freedom has been translated into the
streets,"with far fewer roadblocks, where the Basiji [hard-line militia
volunteers] these days are "so polite," he says, compared to a decade
ago when "they were violent."

But he understands the limits: A decade ago, he was caught during a raid
at a family party where alcohol was served. He received 75 lashes in
punishment.

Friends told him to take photos of his lacerated back and use them to
apply for political asylum.

"I was very angry for a year. I thought: 'Why do they use this violent,
old-fashioned way [of punishment]?' " says Mahfouzian. "Why do we have
such laws? And why do we have such people to carry them out?"

"I went through this dark period - I tried to leave everything behind,
to turn my back on the country and try to go to America," the young man
says, noting that the lashings, family bankruptcy, and love problems
prompted a period of "crazy" moves that included becoming the youngest
Iranian to get a parachuting certification.

"Then I came to my senses," he goes on. "I like this place, and want to
live here. So I had to adapt myself and accept certain things."

Iranian youths who refuse even to acknowledge that hard-liners play such
a decisive role in Iranian society - for better or worse - have
"inexperienced" views, he says, "not based on reality."

"You must decide: Will you grow up and adjust? Or stay reckless and
destructive?" says Mahfouzian. "Not all rightists are bad, and not all
the leftists [reformers] are good.
enditem


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