Iran’s Security Council blocks enforcement of hijab law, parliament says
File photo of women without mandatory hijab in Tehran
Iran's Parliament Speaker Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf said on Sunday that the Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) has instructed the legislature not to enforce a contentious law mandating stricter hijab regulations.
“Although I had no intention of publicly declaring this in such explicit terms, the SNSC has formally written to the Parliament, directing us not to promulgate the hijab and chastity law for now," Ghalibaf told lawmakers.
His remarks came in response to a demand from hardline MP Mohammad-Taghi Naghdali, who urged the Speaker to forward the bill for executive enforcement.
The legislation—officially titled The Law to Support the Family by Promoting Chastity and Hijab—was passed by Parliament in December 2023 but has remained unenforced amid internal disagreements and widespread public opposition at home and abroad. The United Nations said the proposal amounted to "gender apartheid".
Ghalibaf emphasized that, under Article 176 of Iran’s Constitution, the SNSC has overriding authority on matters of national security.
“When the Council issues a directive of this nature, the Speaker has no legal authority to proceed with enforcement,” he said.
Behind-the-scenes power struggles
The decision underscores an intensifying struggle between Iran’s ultra-conservative factions, who demand immediate enforcement, and state institutions seeking to avoid further social unrest.
In recent months, hardliners and religious vigilante groups have mounted increasing pressure on authorities to enforce the law, even staging sit-ins outside Parliament that were eventually broken up by police.
Mohammad-Mannan Raisi, a firebrand MP closely aligned with the ultraconservative Paydari (Steadfastness) Front, recently accused the SNSC of betraying the Islamic Republic’s core supporters by halting enforcement of what he called “God’s commandments.”
The SNSC’s September 2024 decision to quietly shelve the law followed a wave of public backlash, echoing the protests that erupted in 2022 after the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in morality police custody. The unrest marked one of the most significant challenges to the Islamic Republic in decades.
Surveillance without legislation
While the law itself remains suspended, authorities have pursued enforcement by other means.
Since late March, women in Tehran, Shiraz, and Isfahan have reported receiving text-message warnings for alleged hijab violations detected via surveillance footage.
Activists and digital rights experts say the messages are powered by AI-enabled facial recognition systems, cross-referenced with government ID databases and mobile phone data.
Critics have condemned the approach as unconstitutional and ethically fraught.
“Does the Headquarters for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice even have legal access to people’s personal data?” asked Abdollah Ramezanzadeh, a former government spokesman and law professor, in a popular post on X.
In March, the UN's Fact Finding Mission on Iran said, "surveillance online was a critical tool for State repression," including against those rejecting the mandatory hijab.
"This enforcement increasingly relies on technology, surveillance and even State-sponsored vigilantism," the investigators said, with methods including dedicated apps to report violators and the monitoring of social media.
Despite government denials, the crackdown has continued.
In April, Iran’s police signed a cooperation agreement with the Education Ministry allowing enforcement measures in schools, sparking backlash from teachers’ unions who warned of “militarizing education.”
The standoff over hijab enforcement highlights deeper political dilemmas which continue to challenge Iran’s clerical leadership.
Public defiance continues to rise. Across major cities, women are increasingly seen without headscarves in public spaces, often posting videos online in acts of civil disobedience.
Truck drivers across Iran staged a third consecutive day of strikes on Saturday, with videos sent to Iran International showing a broad and coordinated stoppage from Isfahan and Borujerd to Mashhad and ports in the south.
The strike, called by the national union of truckers and drivers, has emptied highways, halted freight movement, and drawn in voices from across the country demanding action on long-standing sector grievances.
In a video from Kaveh Industrial City in Markazi province, a driver said: “Please respect each other. These men have debts, they have loans, but they stood their ground so we can fix things.”
Another video from Firoozkouh showed drivers refusing to take loads, stating: “Not a single truck moved freight today. Every driver is on strike.”
Protesters cite steep insurance costs, delays in diesel quota refills and low cargo rates as key reasons for the strike.
A driver from Dezful sent a message saying, “These trucks’ freight rates are too low. They either don’t get fuel or the diesel fuel cards are topped up late. Why has truck and driver insurance gotten so expensive?”
The scale of the action was visible in near-empty transport corridors. A driver on the Tehran-Isfahan highway filmed the road devoid of freight trucks, saying: “Today is Saturday, May 24. This is the Tehran–Isfahan highway, and there’s not a single trailer or truck in sight.”
Another video from Sabzevar showed trailers honking in unison.
In Kazerun, farmers were seen protesting the lack of available transport for their produce.
A driver from Zarand, Kerman, urged others to maintain discipline: “This video is from Zarand. No one should enter the city until we can support each other. Stand together.”
The drivers’ union, which earlier announced, “Our trucks are silent, but our voices are louder than ever,” said the strike would continue until authorities formally commit to resolving their demands.
“We won’t be deceived again,” the union said in a statement. “No driver will turn on the engine until our demands are officially recognized and enforced.”
Exiled prince Reza Pahlavi expressed support for the truckers’ nationwide strike on Friday, writing on X: “As one of the country’s vital economic pillars, your protest against unjust working and living conditions gives voice to the shared suffering of millions of Iranians crushed for years under injustice, incompetence, and corruption.”
Launched on May 18 in Bandar Abbas, the coordinated protest has since spread to over 35 cities, with truckers pledging to hold out for a full week or possibly longer if their demands remain unmet.
Iranian dissident filmmaker Jafar Panahi won the Palme d'Or for his film It Was Just an Accident at the 78th Cannes Film Festival, using the moment to call for unity among Iranians worldwide in their struggle for freedom at home.
Panahi, who has faced imprisonment and a 15-year travel ban for his outspoken criticism of the Islamic Republic, received a standing ovation as Cate Blanchett presented the award.
In his acceptance speech, he urged unity among Iranians striving for democracy: "Let's set aside our differences. The important thing now is the freedom of our country, so that no one would dare to tell us what to wear or what film to make."
France's foreign minister Jean-Noël Barrot said in a French post on his X account, "In an act of resistance against the Iranian regime's oppression, Jafar Panahi wins a Palme d'Or, reigniting hope for freedom fighters around the world."
The thriller, co-produced by Iran, France, and Luxembourg, was made clandestinely without official permission from Iranian authorities and features women not wearing the hijab, challenging Iran's compulsory dress code laws.
Panahi who managed to leave Iran and attend his film's premiere at Cannes after a 15-year travel ban, said on Wednesday he would be returning immediately to Iran after attending the Cannes Film Festival to begin work on his next film despite being free to travel again.
Panahi was released on bail from Tehran's notorious Evin Prison in February 2023 after he started a hunger strike.
Making history
Panahi has achieved a rare distinction in the world of cinema by winning the top honors at all three major European film festivals. His 2025 Palme d'Or adds to his previous accolades: the Golden Bear at the Berlin International Film Festival for Taxi in 2015 and the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival for The Circle in 2000.
This accomplishment places Panahi among a select group of filmmakers who have achieved this triple crown of European cinema. The other directors who have earned this distinction are Michelangelo Antonioni, Robert Altman, and Henri-Georges Clouzot.
Iran late last month executed a young man accused of helping Israel carry out assassinations and bomb attacks, but a prominent activist, human rights groups and a leaked call from the condemned prisoner indicate the charges were false.
Mohsen Langarneshin, a 32-year-old network security engineer, was executed in Ghezel Hesar Prison on April 30 on charges of “waging war against God” and “spreading corruption on Earth,” according to the judiciary’s media outlet Mizan.
Beyond vague headlines in state-controlled outlets, few details of his background and case were publicly available. But rights activist Ryma Sheermohammadi and sources close to Langarneshin told Iran International that the case was fabricated, his trial deeply flawed and confessions he made were extracted under torture.
Iranian authorities were so keen to round up suspects amid serial Israeli intelligence breaches, Sheermohammadi said, that they accused him of being involved in the death of a top missile general they have publicly insisted died by accident.
“This case was manufactured,” Sheermohammadisaid. “He was executed on charges of espionage without a shred of material evidence. The case was built entirely on forced confessions extracted under extreme physical and psychological torture.”
“Mohsen was an easy target for them. They tortured him to gain confessions out of him and he didn’t even tell anyone and fell for their lies that they would spare his life if he complied,” a source close to Langarneshin told Iran International.
Accidental blast
According to Sheermohammadi, Langarneshin was accused of involvement in three high-profile incidents: the 2011 explosion that killed the architect of Iran’s missile program Brigadier General Hassan Tehrani Moghaddam, the 2022 assassination of Colonel Hassan Sayyad Khodaei in Tehran and a 2023 bombing at a munitions factory in Isfahan.
Tehrani Moghaddam, a brigadier general in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), played a central role in developing Iran’s long-range missile arsenal and was widely regarded as the father of Iran’s missile program.
In 2011, he died alongside over a dozen others in a blast west of Tehran - a huge blow to Iran's military establishment but one officials conceded was an accidental detonation during weapons testing.
“At the time (of Tehrani Moghaddam's death), Mohsen was just 19 years old and had no known link to the incident,” Sheermohammadi said.
Sheermohammadi also dismissed allegations tying Langarneshin to the 2022 assassination of Quds Force officer Sayyad Khodaei.
“In the 2022 assassination of Colonel Sayyad Khodaei, Mohsen was accused of conducting surveillance using a motorcycle,” she said. “But he was living in Isfahan at the time, not Tehran, and there is extensive documentation — CCTV footage, phone records, vehicle ownership — proving his absence from the crime scene.”
Langarneshin was also accused of being involved in a 2023 bombing in Isfahan. “But Mohsen had already moved to Tehran well before the incident,” she said. “Again, workplace footage and telecom records confirm this. Another individual was arrested and executed for that very bombing, which raises serious questions about duplicated or fabricated charges.”
Langarneshin had previously worked under contract as a network security engineer at Imam Hossein University, a US-designated military-linked institution controlled by the IRGC that trains specialists in cyber defense, intelligence and missile technology.
“Mohsen had a brief professional association with Imam Hossein University — an IRGC-affiliated institution,” Sheermohammadi said. “That link gave intelligence agencies just enough of a pretext to cast suspicion on him, years later.”
But she said his affiliation ended after 2019 protests which started over fuel price hikes but quickly turned political. They were quashed by authorities with deadly force.
“Mohsen made a principled decision to resign from the university following the bloody crackdown on protesters in November 2019,” she said. “He could no longer, in good conscience, be affiliated with institutions tied to state violence. That act of integrity may have marked him as politically unreliable in the eyes of the regime.”
Sheermohammadi believes Langarneshin was ultimately targeted not for what he did, but his profile fit what investigators were seeking in a defendant.
“The intelligence services were under pressure to deliver ‘results,’ especially in cases involving alleged foreign plots,” she said.
“Mohsen’s international travel history, financial independence through his car business, and technical expertise all made him an easy target — someone who could be cast into a ready-made narrative of espionage, even when the evidence said otherwise.”
Call from Evin Prison
In a recorded phone call from Evin Prison, a copy of which was obtained by Iran International, Langarneshin described being psychologically tortured in a Ministry of Intelligence safehouse the night of his arrest.
His captors, he said, threatened him with flogging, forced him to write false confessions and later filmed him admitting to his alleged crimes based on their cues.
“They told me to say I bought a motorbike, mounted a camera on it and went to film,” he said in the call. “That was very odd — there was never any mention of what kind of motorbike it was or where it came from. I never did that. They made me say it anyway.”
After resisting, he said he was blindfolded, chained in a schoolyard, and filmed again. “They said, ‘This video is for before your execution. If you read the confession we wrote, maybe we’ll change your sentence to life imprisonment.’”
Judge Abolghasem Salavati of Tehran’s Revolutionary Court—referred to by dissidents as the “hanging judge” for his record of issuing numerous death sentences in politically sensitive cases—and upheld by the Supreme Court.
All three retrial requests were rejected — the last one dismissed within two days and without explanation.
His father, Massoud Langarneshin, released a video the day before the execution, calling the case “full of flaws, ambiguities and questions.” His mother also confirmed she had her final visit with Mohsen that same day and appealed for help.
Several human rights groups including Norway based rights group Iran Human Rights (IHR) condemned the hanging, which IHR said took place alongside several other prisoners," said IHRNGO Director Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam.
“We must raise the cost of these extrajudicial killings for the authorities through strong international reactions and widespread protest.”
Sheermohammadi said Iranian authorities refused to tell Langarneshin family where he was buried and had forced them to delete all their social media posts.
“Mohsen’s family is being forced into silence by intelligence agents. They have been told not to speak to the media about Mohsen. Only if they obey the conditions set by the intelligence agents are they willing to disclose his burial site,” another source told Iran International.
After eleven days of uncertainty, Sheermohammadi confirmed that Langarneshin had been buried in Behesht Zahra cemetery in south Tehran, alongside other executed political prisoners.
Mohsen Langarneshin's burial place in Behesht Zahra cemetery in Tehran, Iran.
The Conservative Political Action Conference announced the launch of CPAC for Iranians in Exile, a platform it says enables the Iranian diaspora to engage with senior Trump administration officials to oppose Tehran.
The project, launched by CPAC in partnership with the United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI), aims to mobilize members of the Iranian diaspora to advocate for human rights, religious freedom, and increased pressure on the Islamic Republic.
CPAC has been a key driver of grassroots support for US President Donald Trump by organizing popular conferences. UANI is an influential advocacy group whose chairman is former Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush.
“We want to get together all these great voices in the exile community and put a real pressure point on the regime in Iran,” CPAC organizer Matt Schlapp told Iran International.
“There should be great unity amongst people who believe in freedom, religious tolerance, human rights to really put pressure on Iran.”
Schlapp said CPAC is committed to helping create a “new version of the maximum pressure campaign,” referring to the Trump administration’s policy against Tehran.
In 2018, during his first term in office, Trump withdrew the United States from the Obama-era nuclear agreement with Iran, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), and imposed his so-called "maximum pressure" sanctions on Tehran.
The sanctions effectively reduced Iran’s oil exports to as little as 150,000 barrels per day. However, oil sales rebounded to at least 1.5 million barrels per day during the Biden administration.
In February this year, Trump reinstated the maximum pressure campaign, aiming to reduce Iran’s oil exports to zero, "deny Iran all paths to a nuclear weapon, and counter Iran’s malign influence abroad."
Since early April, Iran and the US have held five rounds of negotiations mediated by Oman to resolve the dispute over Tehran's nuclear program. The two sides have agreed to hold a sixth round in the near future, American officials said on Friday.
Iranian diaspora's engagement with Trump administration
UANI, which co-launched the initiative, said in a press release that the project will offer a forum for "civil and respectful debate" across the diverse Iranian diaspora.
“The group will provide direct access to policymakers, including senior Trump administration officials, and support those in the diaspora who oppose the Islamist ideology of the Ayatollahs and who support Iran’s territorial integrity," the statement added.
Jason Brodsky, the UANI's policy director, told Iran International that “CPAC for Iranians in Exile will provide the diverse Iranian diaspora with a unique platform to engage with senior Trump administration officials and US policymakers in Washington to discuss Iran policy and an Iran free from the Ayatollah.”
UANI chairman Mark Wallace also said “The Iranian people, who have suffered under the Ayatollah’s rule for 46 years, have not had a consistent platform to be heard. This initiative is an effort to change that and ensure their voices are not just heard but engaged with.”
The CPAC for Iranians in Exile website calls the platform "a defining opportunity for the Iranian people in their courageous fight to end the despotic rule of the Ayatollah and his cronies."
"All of us are committed to see the end of the Ayatollah’s totalitarian Islamist dictatorship."
CPAC for Iranians in Exile says it will be hosting its inaugural conference later this year in Washington DC with the participation of senior US administration officials and policymakers.
Tensions are mounting among Iran's conservative factions as supporters of the Parliament speaker Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf and his ultra-hardline rivals engage in an escalating war of words ahead of a key leadership vote.
A vote for the parliament's presidium is due to be held on May 27 to chose the speaker, his two deputies and six secretaries. The officials are key to running parliament, managing its sessions and deciding what to put on its agenda.
In a social media post on Tuesday, pro-Ghalibaf journalist Mahdi Yamini accused lawmakers from the Paydari (Steadfastness) Party and its allies of plotting against Ghalibaf ahead of the vote.
“A group of Paydari Party lawmakers … have started moves and meetings to lay the groundwork and make preparations for a coup against Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf ... Power struggle to the very gates of hell...!!!” he declared.
Ultra-hardliners’ criticism of Ghalibaf has intensified following his transmission of the controversial Palermo legislation to President Masoud Pezeshkian’s administration for enforcement on Wednesday.
The law, conditionally approved by the Expediency Council on May 14 after years of delay, enables Iran to join the Palermo Convention—a key step toward removing the country from the Financial Action Task Force’s (FATF) black list.
Ultra-hardliners, often referred to as super-revolutionaries, oppose the move, arguing that compliance with FATF requirements would undermine Iran’s ability to support regional allies and bypass international sanctions.
“Signing off on the Palermo Act means exposing all the financial networks we've used to circumvent sanctions,” wrote hardline activist Hadi Naseh in a post on X.
They accuse Ghalibaf—who opposed the Palermo and Counter-Terrorism Financing (CTF) conventions in 2019—of hypocrisy and betraying the national interest.
“What do you think happened that (the Palermo legislation) is now considered to benefit (Iran)?” ultra-hardliner politician Ali-Akbar Raefipour asked in a post on X citing Ghalibaf’s previous objection to joining these conventions.
Ghalibaf’s supporters argue that he was legally obliged to send the legislation to the administration for enforcement regardless of his personal stance.
“Understanding this doesn’t require any special genius as it is an established fact, Ghalibaf supporter and a former ally of former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad posted on X.
'Law of Satan'
Despite the Supreme National Security Council's decision to temporarily postpone its implementation to avoid public backlash, ultra-hardliners have also condemned Ghalibaf for failing to forward a controversial new hijab enforcement law to the administration.
The legislation imposes harsh penalties—including fines and prison sentences—on women who fail to observe strict hijab rules and on businesses that do not enforce them.
Some Iranian media outlets such as Donya-ye Eghtesad predict another term as speaker for Ghalibaf despite the ultra-hardliners’ campaign against him.
Defeating ultra-hardliner Mojtaba Zolnouri, he won last year’s presidium vote with 198 out of 287 ballots. This was down from 234 in 2022 and 210 in 2023.
A hardliner who occasionally adopts pragmatic positions, Ghalibaf has served as speaker for five years but his grip on parliamentary leadership weakened after he fell behind three ultra-hardliner candidates in the March 2023 elections.
The former IRGC-commander won 447,000 votes in an elections marked by voter apathy, particularly in Tehran, where Mahmoud Nabavian became first with 597,000 votes out of a possible 7.7 miilon eligibles---the least for a Tehran frontrunner in all elections since the Islamic Revolution of 1979.