More Iranian women than ever before are deciding to unveil and quietly test government-imposed dress codes [View in browser](
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Iranâs rebellion hasnât dislodged its clerical leadership, but in some ways it has changed womenâs lives. It is six months since 22-year-old Mahsa Amini was arrested for allegedly flouting Islamic dress codes. Her death in custody sparked the biggest revolts since 1979, and those street protests have now waned. Key reading: - [Uncovered and Unbowed, Women Keep Iranâs Protests Alive](
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- [Any Attack on Iran Would Violate Law, UN Says in Dig at Israel]( What is left is a substantial shift, mainly across urban Iran. More women than ever before are deciding to unveil and quietly test government-imposed dress rules. As the world marks International Womenâs Day, such pushing of boundaries is fraught with risk in Iran. The image of the enveloping black chador is tied to the Islamic Republicâs more than four-decade rule, now under a hardline government installed in 2021 and led by a potential successor to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. It also comes at a time of other important challenges for the Iranian regime with repercussions beyond its borders. Talks with the US and other world powers over containing its nuclear program have frozen. As diplomacy falters, international nuclear inspectors have detected uranium enrichment levels in Iran close to weapons-grade. Israel, unnerved by that development and concerned Iran is seeking air defenses from Russia, has shortened its timeline for any potential strike on an atomic program it views as an existential threat. And as Moscowâs war on Ukraine rages almost 2,000 miles away, Tehran is building a transcontinental trade route to Russia that is beyond the reach of any foreign intervention. Back home, a spate of suspected poisoning attacks on schoolgirls since November has once more underlined the threats to women and girls. After officials first dismissed them or put the effects down to âstress,â Khamenei this week called the incidents a âbig crimeâ that warranted severe punishment. Videos shared on Twitter showed protests outside several schools last week. In some of them, chants of âdeath to the dictatorâ and âdeath to the child-killing regimeâ can be heard. Itâs a level of public defiance unthinkable just six months ago. â [Sylvia Westall]( A demonstration against the death of Mahsa Amini in Tehran in September 2022. Source: Getty Images Tune in for our weekly global politics Twitter Space, which will look at the political and economic turmoil hitting emerging market nations from Nigeria to Pakistan. You can listen from 8am ET/1pm London [via this link](. And if you are enjoying this newsletter, sign up [here](. Global Headlines Easing limits | The US is set to lift Covid-19 testing requirements for travelers from China as soon as this week, sources say, a significant step toward [normalizing]( links between the two countries as the pandemic recedes. The US ordered all travelers older than 2 to provide a negative test before entering the US in January, after Chinaâs pivot away from strict Covid restrictions led to a massive outbreak. - Coming Soon: Understand power in Washington through the lens of business, government and the economy. Find out how the worlds of money and politics intersect in the US capital. [Sign up now for the new Bloomberg Washington Edition newsletter](, delivered Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Seeking refuge | Argentina is providing [an unlikely haven]( for Russians fleeing their homeland over Vladimir Putinâs war in Ukraine, [Scott Squires]( reports. Despite economic crises and inflation near 100% in the Latin American nation, Russians have been arriving in droves, including many heavily pregnant women undertaking the journey of more than 12,000 miles to ensure their children gain Argentine citizenship at birth. - The former head of Gazprombankâs Swiss unit and three colleagues went on trial in Zurich today over financial [transactions]( made by a cello-playing confidant of Putinâs.
- Follow our rolling coverage of Russiaâs war in Ukraine [here](. Chinaâs latest attempt to boost its flagging birth rate is a crackdown on betrothal gifts, or [caili](. Itâs a tradition where the groom-to-be pays a âbride priceâ to the womanâs family to demonstrate his sincerity and wealth, while also compensating them for raising a daughter in a country that has long favored sons. Almost three-quarters of marriages in China involve the custom, but few people expect the clampdown to work. Brexit hope | UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunakâs deal to solve the bitter dispute with the European Union over Northern Irelandâs trading arrangements has sparked hope in the City of London that the two sides could finally [formalize]( a pledge to work together on setting rules for banks and financial markets. Best of Bloomberg Opinion - [Sunak Canât Pretend Childcare Is a Niche Issue: Therese Raphael](
- [Putin and Saddam Hussein Have a Lot in Common: Leonid Bershidsky](
- [A Whale of a Deal to Save the Oceans (And Us): Lara Williams]( Targeting TikTok | The White House endorsed a bipartisan bill that could give the US president authority to impose a ban or other restrictions on foreign-owned technologies and applications such as TikTok. The support may hasten passage and break a deadlock over how to address national security and privacy [concerns]( around the popular Chinese social media app used by roughly 100 million Americans. - The US Federal Trade Commission [plans to depose]( Elon Musk as part of its probe into Twitterâs privacy and data security practices, sources say. Explainers you can use - [What to Know About Netanyahuâs Far-Right Government in Israel](
- [Spain Disappointed by Germanyâs Last-Minute Challenge to Car Ban](
- [How Floating Solar Panels Are Being Used to Power Electric Grids]( Coalition tensions | Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchezâs coalition faces the worst threat to its unity so far, after its junior partner voted against changing a law that unintentionally lowered hundreds of sentences for [sex offenders](. Opposition by the far-left party Unidas Podemos to changes pushed by its Socialist partners could hurt both parties in a key election year set to decide Sanchezâs fate. Bloomberg TV starting Monday March 13 will relaunch Balance of Power at 5pm to 6pm ET weekdays with Washington correspondents [Annmarie Hordern]( and [Joe Mathieu](. You can watch and listen on Bloomberg channels and online [here](. News to note - US President Joe Biden is set to announce the details next week of a [nuclear submarine deal]( with the leaders of Australia and the UK in California, sources say.
- Greek public sector workers are walking off their jobs today as the nationâs worst-ever train crash last week sparks a [political backlash]( against Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis.
- A [growing divide]( between US Senate Leader Mitch McConnell and his fellow Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy was on show yesterday over Fox Newsâs airing of security footage from the Jan. 6 insurrection.
- The M23 rebel group clashed with Democratic Republic of Congo soldiers, [defying a ceasefire]( in the country that was meant to go into effect yesterday, the United Nations says.
- An International Monetary Fund loan for Ethiopia is âdefinitely back on the table,â S&P Global Ratings says, a [key step]( to restart the Horn of Africa nationâs debt-restructuring plans. And finally ... The number of high-containment labs around the world conducting potentially risky scientific research handling [deadly viruses]( and organisms is surging, despite a lack of global agreement on how to make sure theyâre safe. As [Riley Griffin]( and [Madison Muller]( explain, scientific safety has re-emerged as a high-stakes global issue since the US Department of Energy suggested it had intelligence showing a lab leak was the most likely origin of the Covid-19 pandemic. A technician enters a Covid-19 research laboratory at the African Health Research Institute in Durban, South Africa, in 2021. Photographer: Waldo Swiegers/Bloomberg Follow Us Like getting this newsletter? [Subscribe to Bloomberg.com]( for unlimited access to trusted, data-driven journalism and subscriber-only insights. You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg's Bloomberg Politics newsletter. If a friend forwarded you this message, [sign up here]( to get it in your inbox.
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