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Turkish Airlines office in Tehran closed after employees defy Iran’s headscarf law: report

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This photograph taken on November 14, 2023 shows a Turkish Airlines’ logo on an office building in İstanbul. (Photo by BULENT KILIC / AFP)

Police in Iran shut down the Turkish Airlines office in the capital of Tehran after female employees there apparently refused to wear the mandatory headscarf, or hijab, in an act of defiance of the country’s law, The Associated Press reported, citing Iranian media.

The semi-official Tasnim news agency said police officers went to the Turkish Airlines office in Tehran on Monday to issue what is called a first warning over the “non-observance of hijab” by the company’s employees.

However, the employees — who are Iranian nationals — reportedly “made trouble for the police officers,” prompting the closure. The Tasnim report said police subsequently sealed the office over the employees’ behavior.

According to Tasnim, the Turkish Airlines office will be allowed to reopen on Wednesday and resume business as usual, something that the police did not confirm. The report further said the police would not seal any business due to the non-observance of hijab but issue first warnings.

There was no immediate comment from Turkish Airlines over the incident in Tehran.

An open defiance of the headscarf law erupted into mass protests across Iran following the September 2022 death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini after her arrest by the country’s morality police. While those demonstrations appear largely to have cooled, the choice by some Iranian women to remain uncovered in the street poses a new challenge to the country’s theocracy.

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