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Iran women splurge on makeup despite restrictions

MilesTogo

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http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect.../dawn/news/culture/04-iran-women-makeup-qs-06

Iran women splurge on makeup despite restrictions

Thursday, 03 Jun, 2010

Banned after the 1979 Islamic revolution, cosmetics like lipstick and nail polish have flooded Iran so much in recent years that it is now the Middle East's second largest beauty products market.

Following the revolution, the morality police patrolled the streets, fining or even arresting women who flaunted the strict rules until they were eased after the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war.

And most women were quick to catch on after a decision to allow imports in the mid-1990s with many taking to the streets all dolled-up, especially chic young urbanites.

Iranians spend about two billion dollars a year on cosmetics and the country of 74 million accounts for 29 per cent of the Middle East market, which is dominated by Saudi Arabia, according to a recent survey.

Most beauty products are now imported or smuggled into Iran, as the country produces little of its own makeup but has a vast, porous coastline just across the water from modern Gulf city states like Dubai.

Almost all popular international brands like Yves Saint Laurent, Guerlain, L'Oreal and Bourjois are available at trendy uptown malls and stores in cities and large towns.

“Most specialists estimate that about 700 to 750 million dollars worth of products are imported to Iran illegally,” said Abbas Najafi, the head of Iran's counter-trafficking bureau.

Vista Bavar, who promotes the recently launched European brand Caprice in Iran, was of the same opinion, stressing that “many products are smuggled into Iran.”

“The health ministry is very precise about its criteria, which is very good as consumers can be sure about the quality when there is an official seal of approval,” Bavar said.

“But 50-per cent duty fees and red tape work against legal imports,” the entrepreneur added.

People involved in the beauty business admit that smuggled goods tend to be of poor quality.

“Over the past years the market has been flooded with low-quality Chinese products which do not meet the required standards,” said a major importer of cosmetics who asked not to be named.

But “Chinese products account for about 30 per cent of illegal imports and they have their own market in provincial areas and among people with lower income,” he added.

According to a survey conducted by TMBA, a private economic research institute, about 14 million urban Iranian women aged between 15 and 45 spend seven dollars on average per month on cosmetics.

With the minimum wage in Iran set at 300 dollars and the average monthly income between 600 and 700 dollars, that is a fair amount.

TMBA said Iranians splurge on cosmetics probably because most of the population is young and urban: half the population is below 30 years old, and 65 per cent is urban.

Since 1979, women have had to observe the Islamic dress code, mandating that hair and body be modestly covered in public.

To abide by the code, outside the home most urban women wear a headscarf, and a loose coat over their regular clothes.

Women have also constantly challenged the dress code by sporting shorter, tighter Islamic overcoats and flashing locks of dyed hair under loosely-worn scarves, drawing condemnation and occasional crackdowns by the hardliners in power.

Women in government jobs still can not wear makeup at work.

“Because of the veil (dress code), young Iranians pay a lot of attention to their faces,” which together with hands are the only body parts visible in public, said Mina, who sells cosmetics in the Iranian capital.

“Some girls spend over an hour in front of a mirror to get ready. If the fashion in Europe is to appear natural, in Iran the youth prefer to wear makeup,” she said
 
please post pics

Exactly! Pics or didnt happen. ;)



I dont understand what is the problem here. Women, for thousands of years over various civilizations have been using various materials and concoctions to beautify themselves. Show me a civilization where women havent used make up or ornaments and I will show evidence that Pluto is a planet! It is but a natural evolutionary mating instinct for women to be presentable in order to attract the best genes for procreation. It is an observation based on scientific facts.
A thousands of years of evolutionary instinct cannot be undone just for the sake of whims of a few. Come to think of it, it would be the genetically weaker individuals who would oppose such an evolutionary design!
It is also surprising that in the animal kingdom, it is mostly the male of the species which adorns itself (with leaves, feathers, colorful plumes etc) to attract females to mate. Surprising aint it?
 
I have seen a lot of Iranian girls in India in Pune and in the same society as mine, they are as modern as USA. Very short dress and boyfriends and live in relationship etc. It seems when there is no restrictions that is when you get to see how people will like to live. My criteria for finding how much people believe in culture etc they talk about is seen when they have nothing to worry about.
 
I don't understand the commotion. In the West girls start to wear make-up at a very young age and have intercourse early in their teens as well. In Iran some women wear make-up and its breaking news in the world.

This is part of the whole dynamic of propaganda: they have already created the antagonist ("the evil Islamic mullah regime") and for the past 31 years they have been trying to find a protagonist. Sometimes the protagonist comes in the form of an intellectual, sometimes in the form of a rioter, and sometimes in the form of the unsatisfied young.

The basic point they are trying to make: "Look at how these brave youths fight the evil mullahs by being so vain."

Ali Shariati, an Iranian philosopher, talked about this 40 years ago. He said that feminism in the Islamic world is simply a tool for the imperialists to create new markets for their useless consumer goods (cosmetics being a major part of that).

As for Iranian dressing codes and traditions. Shariati said, "This is not traditional dress. It is not the dress of my class. It is the dress of my thoughts. These clothes show how I think & to what I am affiliated, how a mujahid thinks. What do your clothes represent? Your clothes are a reflection of how much money you or your father or husband earn. Thus they reflect money rather than a way of thought. One form of dress reflects a belief system, while the other is monetary."

That being said, the Iranian media and movie industry (both inside and outside Iran), which influences society as do similar industries in other countries, plays somewhat of a role in this as they are able to cast images which audiences can relate to and thus affect their views/ aspirations. I have mixed views about the issue but I don't understand the level of commotion that this makes news to the outside world.

To express my point, below are some examples of known Iranian media personalities clad with heavy make-up...

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Regular people...



Iranians are as bound to influences as other people in the world. My concern lies more in the economics rather than the social aspects.
 
Every women likes to look good, if make-up makes her fell good about herself, let her do.

What's the big fuss about.
 
pasban, you're from a different generation, the generation that brought the mullahocracy so don't speak. You are nothing but a mullah lover.
Iran today is split right in half. Most want this regime to go but a hizbollahi minority like pasban will forever stick to the mullahs. Unfortunately you guys have the guns but like all dictators you will fall on your ***** HARD.
Shah khamenei will be hanged just like Saddam.
The only similarity between you and the new gneration is our language, nothing more.
 
Every women likes to look good, if make-up makes her fell good about herself, let her do.

What's the big fuss about.

are you guys serious?
Out of all ppl I thought Indians could understand the mindset of radical Muslims! We're being ruled by a radical Islamic regime.
 
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pasban, you're from a different generation, the generation that brought the mullahocracy so don't speak. You are nothing but a mullah lover.

Having an uncontrolled mouth yourself, it is not right of you to tell people around here when they could speak or not. Also, if I am a "mulla lover" then by that analogy you are an "Islamophobe."

Iran today is split right in half. Most want this regime to go but a hizbollahi minority like pasban will forever stick to the mullahs. Unfortunately you guys have the guns but like all dictators you will fall on your ***** HARD.

I agree with the fact that Iranians have varying sentiments about their government. But my opinion or yours does not matter as much as does that of those who actually live in Iran continuously.

Also, seem likes that you are an expert statistician as you can apparently divide the population into such clear black and white prisms. The majority of those who have qualms with the IRI, like myself, seek reform and not an end to the republic.

Shah khamenei will be hanged just like Saddam.
The only similarity between you and the new gneration is our language, nothing more.

Khamenei is not a Shah-- he has not inherited his position by blood for that is technically how the leadership passes on in a monarchy. God-willing we shall never see the return of a ruling family in Iran again. Also, it's odd hearing about Saddam from your mouth. My "generation" that you speak so ill of suffered terribly during the war. I lost many family members and many of them to Saddam's gas terror. So don't lecture me on who is a true "vatanparast." Your father probably lived through to see the end of it. Perhaps you do have some criterion of right and wrong or moral standards for that matter.


Lastly, I do intend to ignore you completely but you insist on purposely referring to me as above. This should be a hint enough. Go to the ariamehr forum or pari safari's blog and feel more at home there why don't you.
 
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