The following is a four-part series comparing the Islamic State and the Islamic Republic of Iran. On the surface, the two have the same goal – a pure, idealized government based on Sharia law. Yet the two Islamic systems differ in political systems, economic life, culture and, most of all, the role of religion.
Part 1 - Rival Islamic States: ISIS v Iran
Part 2 - Rival Political Visions: ISIS v Iran
Part 3 - Rival Islamic Leaders: ISIS v Iran
Part 4 - Rivals on Women & Minorities: ISIS v Iran
Rival Islamic States: ISIS v Iran
Cameron Glenn and Garrett Nada

 Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al Baghdadi (left) has vowed that Muslims around the world should be united  “under a single flag and goal.” ISIS is aggressively trying to conquer  territory. It has called on Muslims worldwide to either immigrate to the  Islamic State or pledge allegiance to it. Militant groups in more than  10 countries, including Libya, Egypt and Algeria, have publicly declared  support for the Islamic State.
Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al Baghdadi (left) has vowed that Muslims around the world should be united  “under a single flag and goal.” ISIS is aggressively trying to conquer  territory. It has called on Muslims worldwide to either immigrate to the  Islamic State or pledge allegiance to it. Militant groups in more than  10 countries, including Libya, Egypt and Algeria, have publicly declared  support for the Islamic State. In  the revolution’s early days, Iran ambitiously sought to export its  revolutionary ideology among both Shiites and Sunnis. It particularly  condemned monarchies. "We shall export our revolution to the whole  world," Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini pledged.  "Until the cry 'there is no god but God' resounds over the whole world,  there will be struggle." But Iran’s only territorial dispute is with  the United Arab Emirates over three small islands in the Gulf. It  instead cultivates spheres of influence in Shiite communities, notably  in Iraq and Afghanistan, although its goal has not been to gain  territory. It has poured hundreds of millions of dollars into groups  with common causes, such as Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Hamas and Islamic  Jihad in the Palestinian Authority.
In  the revolution’s early days, Iran ambitiously sought to export its  revolutionary ideology among both Shiites and Sunnis. It particularly  condemned monarchies. "We shall export our revolution to the whole  world," Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini pledged.  "Until the cry 'there is no god but God' resounds over the whole world,  there will be struggle." But Iran’s only territorial dispute is with  the United Arab Emirates over three small islands in the Gulf. It  instead cultivates spheres of influence in Shiite communities, notably  in Iraq and Afghanistan, although its goal has not been to gain  territory. It has poured hundreds of millions of dollars into groups  with common causes, such as Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Hamas and Islamic  Jihad in the Palestinian Authority.Iranian women are educated, capable & powerful. In this Gov. we're hoping to ensure equal opportunity #GenderEquality pic.twitter.com/7rjtqBYQ5D
— Hassan Rouhani (@HassanRouhani) September 2, 2013Cameron Glenn and Garrett Nada

|  The Islamic State |  The Islamic Republic   of Iran | 
| “By Allah’s grace –   you have a state and Khilafah, which will return your dignity, might, rights,   and leadership. It is a state where the Arab and non-Arab, the white man and   black man, the easterner and westerner are all brothers. It is a Khilafah   that gathered the Caucasian, Indian, Chinese, Shami, Iraqi, Yemeni, Egyptian,   Maghribi (North African), American, French, German, and Australian. Allah   brought their hearts together, and thus, they became brothers by His grace,   loving each other for the sake of Allah, standing in a single trench,   defending and guarding each other, and sacrificing themselves for one   another. Their blood mixed and became one, under a single flag and goal, in   one pavilion, enjoying this blessing, the blessing of faithful brotherhood.”  - Speech   by ISIS leader Abu Bakr al Baghdadi In practice: Baghdadi describes a   utopian Islamic society encompassing Muslims of all ethnicities. The influx of foreign fighters to the Islamic State seems to reflect this   global orientation, as more than 20,000 militants from 80 countries have reportedly flocked to Syria. But reports suggest that life in the Islamic State is not as idyllic as its   leaders claim. Foreign fighters occupy many of the top administrative posts   in the bureaucracy, generating resentment among Syrians. ISIS fighters also reportedly benefit   disproportionately from the collection of taxes, receiving generous salaries and benefits from tax revenues without being required to   contribute to them. | “In the view of Islam,   government does not derive from the interests of a class, nor does it serve   the domination of an individual or a group. It represents rather the   crystallization of the political ideal of a people who bear a common faith   and common outlook, taking an organized form in order to initiate the process   of intellectual and ideological evolution towards the final goal, i.e.,   movement towards Allah. Our nation, in the course of its revolutionary   developments, has cleansed itself of the dust and impurities that accumulated   during the taghuti [idol-worshipping] past and purged itself of   foreign ideological influences, returning to authentic intellectual   standpoints and world-view of Islam. It now intends to establish an ideal and   model society on the basis of Islamic norms.” In practice: Iran’s constitution   lays out an idyllic vision that does not serve the interests of any   particular group. But in reality, a few groups have disproportionately   benefited from the system. The clerical establishment has grown rich and powerful since 1979.   Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, for example, reportedly controls a multi-billion financial empire.  The Revolutionary   Guards have steadily gained control over large sectors of the economy since   the 1990s, including energy, telecommunications, construction, banking and   finance. The policies of the Ahmadinejad administration (2005-2013) led to privatization of the largely state-run economy that   particularly benefitted companies associated with the Revolutionary Guards.   The Guards, likely the most powerful economic actor in Iran, also control many charitable foundations (bonyads)   that are tax-exempt and largely unregulated by the government. | 
|  The Islamic State |  The Islamic Republic   of Iran | 
| “[Courts] govern by   the laws of God, implement the hudud punishments, ensure rights, and extend   justice; dozens of cases are dealt with daily, and it is based upon a legal   and administrative cadre” - ISIS report on the Aleppo province (translation   via Institute for the Study of War) “We treat people by   what is shown to us by their actions and their devotion to Islam. Our actions   are based on unequivocal evidence and not based on supposition and   questionable premises.” - From an ISIS city charter “Individuals under our   rule are safe and are supported under Islamic law, where their individual   rights are preserved and justice is served to protect the oppressed.” - From an ISIS city charter In practice: ISIS began   establishing courts in July 2013, and has since expanded its judicial system.   The group’s bureaucracy also includes local police forces and   religious police. ISIS has conducted   lashings, stonings, amputations, and executions for a wide range of violations, including adultery, theft, and apostasy. While the total number   of ISIS executions has not been verified, A U.N. report estimates that ISIS militants killed 8,493 civilians in Iraq   alone in 2014. The group claimed to have executed 1,700 Shiites in a single incident, after seizing a prison   outside Mosul in June. The group’s bureaucracy also   includes local police forces and religious police, known as al Hisba, who   conduct regular patrols to crack down on religious offenses like insulting   God or conducting business transactions during prayer time. As of July 2014,   there were more than a dozen Hisba offices in Raqqa and Aleppo that had   logged hundreds of violations. | “The judiciary is of vital   importance in safeguarding the rights of the people in accordance with the   line followed by the Islamic movement, and the prevention of deviations   within the Islamic nation. Provision has therefore been made for the creation   of a judicial system based on Islamic justice and operated by just judges   with meticulous knowledge of the Islamic laws. Article 32 “No one may be   arrested except by the order and in accordance with the procedure laid down   by law… Article 34 “It is the   indisputable right of every citizen to seek justice by recourse to competent   courts. All citizens have right of access to such courts, and no one can be   barred from courts to which he has a legal right of recourse. Article 35 “Both parties to a   lawsuit have the right in all courts of law to select an attorney, and if   they are unable to do so, arrangements must be made to provide them with   legal counsel.” In practice: Iran’s legal system   includes many layers of civil, criminal and military courts. But it also has two   sets of tribunals outside of the judiciary, the Revolutionary Courts and the   Special Court for the Clergy. The latter has been used as a political tool to   silence clerics who urge reform or challenge the regime. Amputation, flogging   and stoning to death are all legal according to Iran’s penal code. The code’s   latest iteration, which entered into force in 2013, “now omits references to   apostasy, witchcraft and heresy, but continues to allow for juvenile executions,” according to a U.N. report. The death penalty applies to a wide range of crimes, including drug-related   offenses, adultery, rape, sodomy, insulting the Prophet Mohammad and crimes   against national security. Iran has seen a sharp rise in executions during   the past few years. At least 411 were executed between January and June 2014,   according to a recent U.N. report. In addition to a   regular police force, Iran also has a volunteer paramilitary organization   operating under the Revolutionary Guards. The Basij Resistance Force is   responsible for supplementing internal security forces, law enforcement and   morals policing. The ubiquitous group has a claimed membership of 12.6   million, but perhaps only 1 million are combat capable. And the number of full-time, uniformed and active members may be less than   100,000. The Basij played an important role the anti-government protests   following the disputed 2009 presidential elections. | 
Image -- The Islamic State's link in N. #Sinai, Jamaat Ansar Bayt Al-Maqdis. #Egypt pic.twitter.com/Bbi545f7YD
— Flashpoint Partners (@FlashpointIntel) January 30, 2015|  The Islamic State |  The Islamic Republic   of Iran | 
| “The Islamic State is   facing a growing list of enemies, and it further underscores the fact that   the lines are being drawn and the camps of īmān (believers) and kufr   (non-believers) are both being cleansed. This will eventually lead to a camp   of kufr with no trace of īmān, and a camp of īmān with no trace of hypocrisy,   as per the statement of the Prophet...all parties will soon be forced to make   a choice between the two.” - Issue # 4 of ISIS's "Dabiq" magazine “With this declaration   of the caliphate, it is incumbent upon all Muslims to pledge allegiance to   the Caliph Ibrahim and support him…The legality of all emirates, groups,   states, and organizations becomes null by the expansion of the caliph’s   authority and arrival of its troops to their areas.” - Spokesman   Shaykh Abu Muhammad al-Adnani al-Shami, "This is the Promise of Allah" “If you cannot perform   hijrah for whatever extraordinary reason,   then try in your location to organize bay’āt (pledges of allegiance) to the   Khalīfah Ibrāhīm. Publicize them as much as possible.” - Issue # 2 of ISIS's "Dabiq" magazine In practice: ISIS militants   captured large swaths of territory in Syria and Iraq in 2014. The group has not   yet conquered land elsewhere, but has attempted to promote the   Islamic State globally. ISIS publications encourage Muslims around the world   to either migrate to the Islamic State or declare allegiance to it. Jihadists   in nearly a dozen countries – including Libya, Algeria, Egypt, and Saudi   Arabia – have reportedly pledged allegiance to ISIS. It is unclear, however, how much direct control ISIS   has over its affiliated branches. | “With due attention to   the Islamic content of the Iranian Revolution, which has been a movement   aimed at the triumph of all the mustad'affun [oppressed] over the mustakbirun   [oppressors], the Constitution provides the necessary basis for ensuring the   continuation of the Revolution at home and abroad. In particular, in the   development of international relations, the Constitution will strive with   other Islamic and popular movements to prepare the way for the formation of a   single world community (in accordance with the Qur'anic verse ‘This your community   is a single community, and I am your Lord, so worship Me " [21:92] ) and to assure the   continuation of the struggle for the liberation of all deprived and oppressed   peoples in the world.’” In practice: Iran has both a   conventional military and the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps. The   constitution commits both to extending God’s sovereignty throughout the   world. But in practice, Iran has only fought defensively in conventional wars   and within its borders since the 1979 revolution. Iran has not used its armed   forces to take additional territory. The theocracy has   actually had little success in exporting its Islamic revolution. Tehran funds the activities of clerics trained in the holy city of Qom and   promotes its brand of Islam in Shiite communities across the world. But the   strength of Iran’s soft power is debatable. In the 1990s, Iran   largely abandoned attempts to spread its revolution among the Shiite minority in   the Gulf. The few elites who do subscribe to the concept of clerical rule and   consider Supreme Leader Khamenei their marja’ (cleric for emulation)   do not enjoy wide support. Iran has had much more   success setting up and assisting armed organizations beyond its borders that   share its goals and values. In Lebanon, the   Islamic Republic has used Hezbollah to expand its influence in Lebanon and challenge Israel. The   powerful Shiite militia and political party has its own domestic agenda and   interests. But the Revolutionary Guards initially set up the organization in   the 1980s, and Hezbollah has continued to play an important role in Iran’s   regional policy.   In Gaza and the West   Bank, Iran has aided Islamic groups committed to armed struggle against Israel. Iran   has provided arms, training and funds to Islamic Jihad and Hamas. | 
Photo credits: Iran flag by SiBr4 via Wikimedia Commons [Public Domain]; Islamic State flag by Global Panorama [CC 2.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/], via Flickr commons
Rival Islamic Leaders: ISIS v Iran
Cameron Glenn and Garrett Nada
|  The Islamic State |  The Islamic Republic   of Iran | 
| On justification of Baghdadi’s leadership: “The scholar who practices what he preaches, the worshipper, the leader, the warrior, the reviver, descendent from the family of the Prophet, the slave of Allah, Ibrāhīm Ibn‘Awwād IbnIbrāhīm Ibn‘AlīIbnMuhammad al-Badrīal-Hāshimīal-Husaynīal-Qurashīby lineage, as-Sāmurrā’ī by birth and upbringing, al-Baghdādī by residence and scholarship. And he has accepted the bay’ah (pledge of allegiance). Thus, he is the imam and khalīfahfor the Muslims everywhere.” - This is the Promise of Allah  “Imamah (leadership) in religious affairs cannot be properly established unless the people of truth first achieve comprehensive political imamah over the lands and the people.” - Issue #1 of ISIS's "Dabiq" magazine  “We will continue to obey the imam as long as he orders us to obey Ar-Rahman (the Most Merciful). But if he orders us to disobey Allah, then we won’t obey those orders.”- Issue #1 of ISIS's "Dabiq" magazine  | Article 109  “Following are the essential qualifications and conditions for the Leader:  •a. scholarship, as required for performing the functions of mufti in different fields of fiqh.  •b. Justice and piety, as required for the leadership of the Islamic Ummah [nation].  •c. right political and social perspicacity, prudence, courage, administrative facilities and adequate capability for leadership.  In case of multiplicity of persons fulfilling the above qualifications and conditions, the person possessing the better jurisprudential and political perspicacity will be given preference.”  | 
The Leaders
|  The Islamic State |  The Islamic Republic   of Iran | 
| Abu Bakr al Baghdadi   Baghdadi was born in Samarra in 1971, and reportedly received jihadist training in Afghanistan in the late 1990s, where he lived with Abu Musab al  Zarqawi in Kabul. He fought with jihadists in Fallujah in the early  2000s after returning to Iraq, and was reportedly held at the U.S.  detention facility Camp Bucca from February to December 2004. In 2010 he assumed leadership of ISIS, then called the Islamic State of Iraq. Little else is known of his background, but jihadist publications claim that he is from a religious family descended from noble tribes, and that he holds a PhD from Baghdad’s Islamic University. Baghdadi is known for avoiding the spotlight. There are only two known photos of him, and he reportedly conceals his identity with a bandanna from everyone outside his small inner circle.   Baghdadi  is the supreme political and religious leader in ISIS territory. The  caliph has virtually unchecked authority, but in practice he relies on  deputies like Abu Muslim al Turkemani, who oversees ISIS areas in Iraq, to manage administration of its territory. The Islamic State has ashuracouncil that can theoretically depose the caliph, but all members areappointed by Baghdadi.  The leader has a strongly anti-Western world view, and in his speeches he  has urged Muslims around the world to rise up and take revenge against  injustices inflicted by “the Jews, the Crusaders, their allies...all  being led by America and Russia.”  | Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei   Born  in 1939 to a traditional family, Ali Khamenei followed in his father’s  footsteps and became a cleric. He joined the struggle against the  monarchy in the 1960s and spentseveral years in prison before the 1979 revolution. Khamenei’s  sacrifices for the Islamic revolution and close relationship with  Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini helped him to attain power within the new  government. He served as president for two terms from 1981 to 1989. When  Khomeini died in 1989, he left no designated successor. Khamenei was selected by the Assembly of Experts as the second supreme leader, despite the objection of some senior clerics who felt he lacked the theological credentials.     As  supreme leader, Khamenei is Iran’s most powerful official. He wields  constitutional authority or significant influence over all branches of  the government, the military and the judiciary.  His control over the 12-man Guardian Council, which vets all candidates  for public office, enables him to influence who can and cannot run. For  most of his tenure, Khamenei has preferred to stay out of the public  eye.   Khamenei  still upholds the revolutionary and anti-Western narrative of the 1979  revolution. The United States and its allies, especially Israel, are  trying to undermine Iran and the progress of Muslim nations, according  to his worldview.  | 
Quotes
The following are quotes by Baghdadi and Khamenei on key issues.
|  The Islamic State |  The Islamic Republic   of Iran | 
| On Democracy  “The  Muslims today have a loud, thundering statement, and possess heavy  boots. They have a statement that will cause the world to hear and  understand the meaning of terrorism, and boots that will trample the  idol of nationalism, destroy the idol of democracy and uncover its  deviant nature.” - July 1, 2014, in a  speech  On Iran  "Muslims' rights are forcibly seized in...Iran (by the rafidah* (shia)."  "Terrorism is to worship Allah as He ordered you. Terrorism is to refuse humiliation, subjugation, and subordination (to the kuffar–  infidels). Terrorism is for the Muslim to live as a Muslim, honorably  with might and freedom. Terrorism is to insist upon your rights and not  give them up...Terrorism does not include the extreme torture and degradation of Muslims in East Turkistan and Iran (by the rafidah), as well as preventing them from receiving their most basic rights."  *"Rafidah" is a pejorative term for Shiites  - July 1, 2014, in a  speech  On the United States and Israel  “O ummah  of Islam, indeed the world today has been divided into two camps and  two trenches, with no third camp present: The camp of Islam and faith,  and the camp of kufr  (disbelief) and hypocrisy – the camp of the Muslims and the mujahidin  everywhere, and the camp of the Jews, the crusaders, their allies, and  with them the rest of the nations andreligions of kufr, all being led by America and Russia, and being mobilized by the Jews.”  | On Democracy  “As  for political and social issues, the higher aspect of this religious  democracy is that we have had 32 elections during the 35 years from the  beginning of our Revolution. Thirty two public elections have been held  in this country. Is this a minor achievement? This is an exceptional phenomenon. Elections in the Islamic Republic are held with a high turnout - higher than the global average and in some cases, it is much higher.”  –June 6, 2015 in a speech  On ISIS and al Qaeda  “This takfiri  orientation - the thing that has emerged in Iraq, Syria and some other  regional countries today and that confronts all Muslims, not just Shias -  is the handicraft of colonialists themselves. They made something  called alQaida and DAESH [ISIS] in  order to confront the Islamic Republic and the movement of the Islamic  Awakening. However, this product has become a burden for them.”  “We  see that the unreal effort which America and its allies are making in  the region today under the name of confronting DAESH is, in fact, an  effort for channeling enmities among Muslims more than it is an effort  for nipping this evil movement in the bud. They try to pit Muslims  against one another. Today, they have chosen this ignorant, prejudiced,  fossilized and dependent group as the element for doing this. Otherwise,  the goal is the same old goal.”  – Sept. 13, 2014 in a speech  
 On the United States and Israel “If we are to find a regime in the world which is evil towards everyone and plots against everyone, that regime is the American regime. It is the United States of America which is evil towards everyone, as wherever it strides in, it does so with aggressiveness, arrogance, voracity and insolence.” – Oct. 29, 2008 “[Western-style] freedom in the economy, political scene and moral issues…reflect terrible, bitter, heinous and in some cases abhorrent realities in the Western society. The results are discrimination, bullying, warmongering and double standards towards noble issues like human rights and democracy.” “If the Zionist regime makes a wrong move, the Islamic Republic of Iran will raze Tel Aviv and Haifa to the ground.” | 
Photo credit: Khamenei.ir via Facebook
Rivals on Women & Minorities
Cameron Glenn and Garrett Nada
|  The Islamic State |  The Islamic Republic   of Iran | 
| “Stability is in the   house, inherently the khidr,or women’s quarters, and go out [from the   house] only when necessary for the guidance of the mothers of the believers…   blessings upon them.” - From an ISIS city charter "Woman was created to populate the Earth just as man was. But, as God wanted it to be, she was made from Adam and for Adam. Beyond this, her creator ruled that there was no responsibility greater for her than that of being a wife to her husband." - From a manifesto on women released by the al Khansaa Brigade, translation via the Quilliam Foundation In practice: In ISIS territory,   women’s freedoms are severely curtailed. They are encouraged to stay at home   and are required to have a male escort to go out in public. In Raqqa, for example, women   have reportedly been   beaten or arrested for traveling outside their homes   without a male chaperone. Many young Syrian   women in ISIS territories have also reportedly been forced to marry against their will. ISIS opened “marriage bureaus” to facilitate marriages between women and   ISIS fighters. Militants have financial incentives to wed, as married   fighters receive a $1,200 grant, a home, and fuel for heating. Many women have been   victims of violence and assault, and militants have executed women for adultery.   ISIS stoned eight women to death in Raqqa alone in June 2014. After seizing   Mosul in June 2014, ISIS militants reportedly went door-to-door assaulting   women. The UN estimated in 2014 that ISIS forced 1,500 women, girls, and young boys   into sexual slavery. ISIS provides limited educational   opportunities for young girls. It has established female-only religious schools, which teach students to memorize the Quran. ISIS enforces   gender segregation in these schools, and prohibits male teachers   from teaching girls. ISIS is also unusual among jihadist groups in that it has an all-female morality   police. The al Khansaa Brigade in Raqqa arrests and punishes other women for   not abiding by ISIS’s strict rules on women’s behavior in society. Members of   the brigade reportedly ask women questions to test their knowledge of prayer,   fasting, and the hijab. In January 2015, the brigade released a semi-official manifesto on the role of women in society. It encouraged women to stay at home and detailed three limited circumstances in which it was permissible for women to leave the house: jihad, studying the Quran, and serving as a doctor or teacher. | Article 20 “All citizens of the   country, both men and women, equally enjoy the protection of the law and   enjoy all human, political, economic, social, and cultural rights, in   conformity with Islamic criteria." Article 21 “The government must   ensure the rights of women in all respects, in conformity with Islamic   criteria, and accomplish the following goals: “1. create a favorable   environment for the growth of woman's personality and the restoration of her   rights, both the material and intellectual; “2 .the protection of   mothers, particularly during pregnancy and childrearing, and the protection   of children without guardians; “3. establishing   competent courts to protect and preserve the family; 4. the provision of   special insurance for widows, and aged women and women without support; 5. the awarding of   guardianship of children to worthy mothers, in order to protect the interests   of the children, in the absence of a legal guardian. In practice: Despite protections   outlined in the constitution, Iranian women face serious discrimination,   especially in matters related to marriage, divorce, inheritance and child   custody. A woman, regardless of her age, needs her male guardian’s consent   for marriage. Women also require permission to obtain a passport and travel   abroad. Child marriage, though   uncommon, is not illegal. The legal age of marriage is 13 for girls and 15 for boys. A judge can grant permission   for children to marry at even younger ages. Rape is illegal and   subject to harsh penalties, including execution. But the government   reportedly does not enforce the law effectively. Spousal rape is not   addressed as sex within marriage is considered consensual. Iran’s laws do not   specifically prohibit domestic violence. Little data is available, but a 2011 University of Tehran   study suggested that a woman was physically abused every nine seconds in   Iran. Women make up some 60 percent of university students. Yet quotas and restrictions limit subjects women can study, notably medicine   and engineering. Only about 16 percent of the workforce is female, according to a U.N. estimate. In the workplace,   women reportedly earn about 61 percent as much money as men in similar jobs. The   law does not require equal pay for equal work. Women must have a man’s consent   to work outside the home. Women serve in   parliament and hold high positions in government ministries. But all of the approximately   30 women who registered as candidates for the 2013 presidential election were disqualified   by the Guardian Council. | 
Iranian women are educated, capable & powerful. In this Gov. we're hoping to ensure equal opportunity #GenderEquality pic.twitter.com/7rjtqBYQ5D
— Hassan Rouhani (@HassanRouhani) September 2, 2013
|  The Islamic State |  The Islamic Republic   of Iran | 
| “To the honorable   women: God is in decency and loose jackets and robes.” - From an ISIS city charter “Women…are completely forbidden   from showing their eyes [and wearing] open abayas that reveal colorful   clothes worn underneath.” “[Clothing] must not be decorated   with beads, sequins, or anything else.” “[Women] must not wear high   heels.” “Anyone who violates this will be   penalized.” - ISIS   statement distributed in Deir Ezzor (translation via the Syrian   Observatory for Human Rights) In practice: ISIS requires that women over the age of ten veil from head to toe when   leaving the house. A November 2014 UN report said police regularly evaluate women’s clothing at multiple   checkpoints in ISIS-held towns. ISIS also inflicts   harsh punishments on women who do not comply with dress   requirements. ISIS documents do not detail punishments, but a woman in Mosul   was reportedly sentenced to 40 lashes for violating the dress code. Men are   also punished if ISIS determines that a woman within their family is not   dressed properly. | Article 638- Anyone in public places and roads who openly   commits a harām (sinful) act, in addition to the punishment provided   for the act, shall be sentenced to two months’ imprisonment or up to 74   lashes; and if they commit an act that is not punishable but violates public   prudency, they shall only be sentenced to ten days to two months’   imprisonment or up to 74 lashes. “Women, who appear in   public places and roads without wearing an Islamic hijab [veil], shall   be sentenced to ten days to two months’ imprisonment or a fine of fifty   thousand to five hundred Rials. - Islamic Penal Code of   the Islamic Republic of Iran –Book Five In practice: Iran lacks a clear   definition of appropriate dress for women. Hijab literally means   covering and could describe many different types of clothing. Some women wear   traditional chadors, while others boldly express themselves. The prevalence of leggings led lawmakers to summon the interior minister in June 2014 to questioning   on lax implementation of dress codes. Women risk being fined or sentenced to   lashings based on the opinion of male and female members of the Basij militia   who enforce the dress code on the street. The dress code, however, does not prevent female athletes from participating in international competitions. Eight out of 53 of Iran’s competitors at the 2012 Olympics were female. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has said Iranians should be proud of female athletes who make it to the medal podium wearing hijab. President Hassan Rouhani has congratulated female athletes on their accomplishments several times.   | 
Heard this from women and FSA MT: @ajaltamimi: #Syria: latest ISIS advertisement for modest dress for women in #Raqqa pic.twitter.com/AIzNOtqhUO
— Shona Murray (@ShonaMurrayNT) November 28, 2013Particularly proud of our women's historic performance in #AsianGames while upholding Islamic values. #Empoweredwoman pic.twitter.com/jJjFVf3gZY
— Hassan Rouhani (@HassanRouhani) October 4, 2014 Iran has not attempted to wholesale convert, expel or kill its religious minorities. According to Iran’s interpretation of Islam, some minorities are considered “People of the Book,” and are thus entitled to protection and some autonomy. The constitution provides for representation of Armenians, Assyrian and Chaldean Christians, Jews and Zoroastrians. But Baha’is, Iran’s largest religious minority, are not protected under the law, are not allowed to practice their faith, and have faced persecution. Although minorities face discrimination from wider society and the government, they generally do not fear for their safety on a daily basis as minorities in the Islamic State do.
Iran has not attempted to wholesale convert, expel or kill its religious minorities. According to Iran’s interpretation of Islam, some minorities are considered “People of the Book,” and are thus entitled to protection and some autonomy. The constitution provides for representation of Armenians, Assyrian and Chaldean Christians, Jews and Zoroastrians. But Baha’is, Iran’s largest religious minority, are not protected under the law, are not allowed to practice their faith, and have faced persecution. Although minorities face discrimination from wider society and the government, they generally do not fear for their safety on a daily basis as minorities in the Islamic State do.|  The Islamic State |  The Islamic Republic   of Iran | 
| “Be very wary of   allying with the Jews and Christians, and whoever has slipped by a word, then   let him fear Allah, renew his faith, and repent from his deed. […] Even if he   supported them just by a single word. He who aligns with them by a single   word falls into apostasy– extreme apostasy.” - Issue # 4 of ISIS's "Dabiq" magazine On Yazidis: “Their creed is so   deviant from the truth that even cross-worshipping Christians for ages   considered them devil worshippers and Satanists.” “Unlike the Jews and   Christians, there was no room for jizyah payment. Also, their women could be   enslaved unlike female apostates who the majority of the fuqahā’ say cannot   be enslaved and can only be given an ultimatum to repent or face the sword.   After capture, the Yazidi women and children were then divided according to   the Sharī’ah amongst the fighters of the Islamic State who participated in   the Sinjar operations.”  - Issue # 4 of ISIS's "Dabiq" magazine ISIS does not permit Christians to build new churches or display   religious symbols in public places. There have also been reports of Christians being forced to convert to Islam or face   execution. In Iraq, ISIS has destroyed Christian property and churches. ISIS deals with other   religious minorities even more harshly. Militants invaded Yazidi communities in Sinjar in August 2014, killing those who refused to convert, and   driving tens of thousands from their homes. ISIS has also killed Shiites in newly captured territories. One ISIS member stated that the Islamic State’s territorial gains in 2014 “purged vast   areas in Iraq and Syria from the filth of the Safavids,” referring to the   sixteenth century Persian Shiite dynasty. | Article 12 “Other Islamic   schools, including the Hanafi, Shafi'i, Maliki, Hanbali, and Zaydi, are to be   accorded full respect, and their followers are free to act in accordance with   their own jurisprudence in performing their religious rites. Article 13 “Zoroastrian, Jewish,   and Christian Iranians are the only recognized religious minorities, who,   within the limits of the law, are free to perform their religious rites and   ceremonies, and to act according to their own canon in matters of personal   affairs and religious education. Article 14 “In accordance with   the sacred verse ("God doesn't forbid you to deal kindly and justly with   those who have not fought against you because of your religion and who have   not expelled you from your homes" [60:8]), the government of the Islamic   Republic of Iran and all Muslims are duty-bound to treat non-Muslims in   conformity with ethical norms and the principles of Islamic justice and   equity, and to respect their human rights. This principle applies to all who   refrain from engaging in conspiracy or activity against Islam and the Islamic   Republic of Iran. In practice: Iran does not   differentiate between Sunni and Shiite Muslims in reporting statistics. But   Sunnis are thought to number between 4 and 8 million, or five to 10 percent of the population.   Sunnis reportedly face discrimination and restrictions on building mosques   and schools. Marginalization of Sunnis in Balochistan led to the formation of   Jundallah, an armed separatist group, in the early 2000s. Sunnis in Iran are from several   ethnicities, such as Baloch, Arab and Kurd. Christians, Jews and   Zoroastrians collectively make up less than one percent of Iran’s population.   Yet they are guaranteed places in the 290-seat parliament proportionate to   the size of their communities: • Two seats for   Armenian Christians, • One for Assyrian and   Chaldean Christians, • One for Jews, • One for   Zoroastrians. But minorities  reportedly still face discrimination in education, employment and property   ownership. Authorities also sometimes charge them for moharebeh (enmity   against God), “anti-Islamic propaganda” or threatening national security for   their religious activities. But Iran’s largest   religious minority, the Baha’is, are not protected under the law or allowed   to practice their faith. They reportedly number up to 350,000 and are   considered apostates by the state.   Other Christians not associated with an ethnic group,   such as Protestants, are not represented in parliament. And conversion from Islam is punishable by   death under the law. So proselytization is banned. | 
