Män hade konstiga frisyrer – greps
50 unga män har gripits i Saudiarabien för en rad förseelser som ”konstiga frisyrer” och för att ha haft halsband eller kortärmade kläder. Det rapporterar nyhetssajten Sabq, som står den saudiska regimen nära, skriver AFP.
Den religiösa polisen har gjort tillslag när de patrullerat i shoppingcentrum i Mecca under fastemånaden ramadan.
bakgrund
Saudiarabiens religiösa polis
Wikipedia (en)
The Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice (abbreviated CPVPV; Arabic: هيئة الأمر بالمعروف و النهي عن المنكر ), also informally referred to as Hai’a, is the Saudi Arabian government agency employing “religious police” or Mutaween (مطوعين), to enforce Sharia Law within that Islamic nation.
The number of police is estimated at 3,500-4,000. Members patrol the streets enforcing dress codes, strict separation of men and women, salat prayer by Muslims during prayer times, and other behavior it believes to be commanded by Islam. They are known for having full beards (sometimes henna-dyed) and for wearing their headscarves (ghutrah or shemagh) loose without an agal—they often wear a besht as well—and for often coming from Saudi Arabia’s lower classes. They were empowered to detain and berate offenders and shut down businesses. Prior to the reforms of 2007 they were armed with thin wooden canes to strike miscreants. However, as of April 2016, the Saudi Council of Ministers has issued a regulation that stripped the religious police of their powers.
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