Saudi Arabia has also sought to stamp out Valentine's Day but it is widely celebrated in nearby Dubai.
Meanwhile
in Indonesia officials and clerics banned young Indonesian Muslims from
celebrating Valentine's Day, arguing that the observance runs against
Islamic teachings.
In
Banda Aceh, the capital of the devout Muslim province of Aceh,
thousands of high school students held rallies rejecting the celebration
of Valentine's Day.
Police told Tehran's coffee and ice
cream shops trade union to prevent gatherings in which boys and girls
exchange Valentine's Day gifts (pictured: Iranians shopping for gifts
in 2008)
Banda
Aceh's mayor, Illiza Sa'aduddin Djamal, and Shariah officials joined
Saturday's rallies, held in four locations in the city's downtown area.
'The
Valentine's Day celebration has become a culture,' Illiza said. She
added that the rallies were aimed at making young people aware that
Valentine's Day is not part of Islamic culture.
The
bans were imposed in many Indonesian cities. A similar rally by junior
high school students was held in Surabaya, Indonesia's second-largest
city.
In
Makassar, the capital of South Sulawesi province, a noted Muslim youth
group, Pemuda Muslimin Indonesia, called on Muslims in the province to
stay away from the celebration.
The
influential Indonesian Council of Clerics has repeatedly declared the
Feb. 14 celebration as an observance stemming from another faith, saying
that celebrating it would be the same as promoting faiths other than
Islam.
Nearly 90 percent of Indonesia's 265 million people are Muslims, with most practicing a moderate form of the faith.
Students display a banner during a protest against Valentine's Day in Banda Aceh, Aceh province, Indonenesia
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