23
Fashion Jobs
BEST SELLER
Payroll Coordinator Slovenia
Permanent · LJUBLJANA
JACK & JONES
Sales Representative Jack & Jones Slovenia
Permanent · LJUBLJANA
INDITEX
Svetovalec za Prodajo / Blagajnik (m/ž)
Permanent · KOPER
INDITEX
Svetovalec za Prodajo / Blagajnik (m/ž)
Permanent · LJUBLJANA
INDITEX
Svetovalec za Prodajo / Blagajnik (m/ž)
Permanent · CELJE
BEST SELLER
Business Developer
Permanent · LJUBLJANA
BEST SELLER
Finance Business Partner
Permanent · LJUBLJANA
NAME IT
Sales Representative Name IT Slovenia
Permanent · LJUBLJANA
SELECTED FEMME/HOMME
Sales Representative Selected Slovenia
Permanent · LJUBLJANA
VERO MODA
Sales Representative Vero Moda Slovenia
Permanent · LJUBLJANA
C&A
Prodajni Svetovalec 808 Koper, 40h
Permanent · KOPER
H&M
Prodajalec (m/ž) - Sales Advisor 40h
Permanent · MURSKA SOBOTA
SPORTS DIRECT
Prodajalec - Sports Direct, Btc
Permanent · LJUBLJANA
H&M
Prodajalec (m/ž) - Sales Advisor
Permanent · LJUBLJANA
JACK & JONES
Sale Assistant (Fulltime) Jack & Jones Celje City Center/Slowenien
Permanent · CELJE
JACK & JONES
Shop Manager (Fulltime) Jack & Jones Celje City Center/ Slowenien
Permanent · CELJE
JACK & JONES
Sale Assistant (Fulltime) Jack & Jones Planet Koper/Slowenien
Permanent · KOPER
JACK & JONES
Store Manager (Fullime) Jack & Jones Planet Koper / Slowenien
Permanent · KOPER
C&A
Prodajni Svetovalec 808 Koper, 40h
Permanent · KOPER
BEST SELLER
People & Culture Business Partner
Permanent · LJUBLJANA
BEST SELLER
Marketing & Communications Specialist
Permanent · LJUBLJANA
BEST SELLER
Accounts Receivable
Permanent · LJUBLJANA
By
Reuters
Published
Sep 22, 2009
Reading time
2 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

No curvy mannequins in Iran shop windows

By
Reuters
Published
Sep 22, 2009

TEHRAN (Reuters Life!) - Iranian police warned shopkeepers on Tuesday 22 September not to use mannequins without headscarves or which exposed body curves, official news agency IRNA reported.



"Using unusual mannequins exposing the body curves and with the heads without Hijabs (Muslim veil) are prohibited to be used in the shops," Iran's moral security police in charge of Islamic dress codes said in a statement carried by IRNA.

Iranian police have stepped up a crackdown on both women and men, boutiques and small companies which fail to enforce strict religious dress codes since President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad came to office in 2005.

The measures are the latest in a country-wide campaign against Western cultural influences in the Islamic Republic, where strict dress codes are enforced.

"Both showing necktie and bowtie behind the windows ... and (the) selling (of) women's underwear by men are prohibited," said the police statement.

In the past, crackdowns tended to be launched at the start of Iran's hot summers and petered out soon after. But last year they extended into winter and included a drive against tight women's trousers and even men with spiky "Western" hairstyles.

Those who violate dress codes are usually cautioned on a first offence, sometimes after a brief visit to a police station. But they can be detained for longer, taken to court and required to have "guidance classes" after repeat offences.

Dress codes are most often flouted in wealthier, urban areas. Conservative dress is the norm in poorer, rural areas.

(Writing by Reza Derakhshi; Editing by Paul Casciato)

© Thomson Reuters 2024 All rights reserved.