The Israeli parliament has suspended its dress code rules, reports say,
after staffers protested against a ban on skirts deemed too short.
Workers said security at the Knesset had strictly enforced rules on the
length of skirts recently, banning colleagues from entering the building.
Speaker Yuli Edelstein said the measure came after mounting complaints
over alleged inappropriate clothing.
A joint team will look at the rules and decide how they should be
implemented.
The suspension followed a tense meeting at the parliament, Israeli
newspaper Haaretz reported.
The group looking into the rules will be made up of male and female
lawmakers and aides.
In October, the parliament's administrative director sent around a letter
reminding everyone of the dress code.
It prohibits T-shirts, shorts, sandals and short dresses or skirts, but
does not specify a length, leaving the issue open to interpretation.
For Wednesday's protest, women wore above-the-knee skirts and dresses in
defiance of the ban.
Some said male guards had embarrassed them by ordering them to unbutton
their coats so they could see the length of their skirts.
MP Manuel Trajtenberg took off his shirt and complained that soon women
would "have to wear burkas".
Speaker Edelstein defended the need for decorum in the legislature. He
said the rules had been in place for many years, but had only been enforced in
recent days following complaints.
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