Saudis crack down on women's clothes

MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) -- The Saudi government is cracking down on factories producing versions of women's cloaks that violate religious rules, a government-controlled newspaper said Thursday.

The report did not say what versions were being targeted of the black, head-to-toe garments Saudi women are required to wear, but some women in the conservative kingdom have been wearing cloaks with glittering red, blue or silver sequins on the cuffs or a jeans pocket sewn on the back.

Cloaks found to be in violation of the rules "will be confiscated and destroyed, while punitive measures will be taken against their owners," the English-language Arab News newspaper quoted Abdul Ali bin Ibrahim Abdul Aali, in charge of combatting trade fraud in the conservative Gulf kingdom, as saying.

Aali said that the ministry is working with the Committee for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice to enforce the crackdown on factories producing the "non-regulation" garments, which are becoming increasingly popular in large Saudi cities, the newspaper reported.

It was not clear when the crackdown began. Ministry officials could not be reached for comment.

Aali said a Saudi religious ruling requires a "decent woman's" cloak to be thick and non-revealing, not body hugging, and devoid of decorations or markings that would attract public attention, the newspaper said.

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