Private mobile-phone companies in Tajikistan have begun sending out text messages to millions of citizens, reminding them to obey a new law that makes Tajik national clothing obligatory at “traditional” gatherings such as weddings and commemorative ceremonies for the dead, according to Radio Liberty’s Tajik Service.

The legislation is reportedly widely seen as an attempt to prevent Tajik women from wearing the Islamic hijab and to discourage men from wearing Islamic clothing -- part of an ongoing government campaign to combat radicalism.

The text messages were being sent to some 6 million mobile-phone users on September 6, a day after the state Women’s and Family Affairs Committee sent a letter instructing a half dozen private mobile operators in Tajikistan to do so.

One of the messages written by the state committee instructs Tajiks to “observe Tajik traditional clothes,” while another tells citizens to “respect traditional clothes.”

A third message from the state committee that was being transmitted on September 6 said: “Let’s make it a tradition to wear traditional clothes."

Tajik President Emomoli Rahmon on August 28 signed the law, which obliges individuals and organizations “to stick to traditional and national clothes and culture” at so-called “traditional” gatherings.

The legislation amended a 10-year-old law that governs the practice of traditions, rites, and celebrations in Tajikistan.

It says citizens of Tajikistan have an obligation to observe and respect the state language and “the style of wearing national traditional clothes.”

Ms. Hilolbi Qurbonzoda, chief of the lower chamber of parliament’s Committee on Social Affairs, has said that separate legislation on possible punishment for those who wear "alien Islamic garments" rather than "traditional" Tajik clothing would be outlined by parliament soon.

Since May 2016, Tajikistan’s authorities have closed down scores of shops for selling women's religious clothing that does not conform with what the government calls “national traditions.”

In early August, more than 8,000 hijab-wearing women were stopped in public places across Dushanbe by teams of state officials who instructed them about how to wear head scarves in the style of “traditional national clothing” -- that is, by tying the scarf with a knot behind the head in a way that leaves the front of the neck exposed.