Supreme Court uphold ban on Muslim headwear in schools

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A branch of Russia’s Supreme Court has rejected an appeal by a group of Muslims for the right of schoolgirls to wear traditional religious attire, specifically the hijab, in classrooms.

The appeal was made by a group of citizens of Muslim faith from  southern Russia’s Stavropol Region. They complained that a decree  by the local administration ordering all schoolchildren to appear  in classes only in regular secular clothes, which came into force  in January this year, infringes their freedom of faith as  guaranteed by the constitution.

Certain denominations of Islam requires that all women wear  special headscarves called hijabs, covering their hair and necks.

The controversy erupted when a group of schoolgirls was barred  from classes for two weeks when they insisted on wearing hijabs.  The girls then began attending to a local religious school, the  parents saying their daughters would receive the mandatory  universal secondary education at home. However the administration  ruled that a religious school cannot replace a secular one.

The Muslims claimed such position was equal to repression against  religion and also that from the formal point of view only the  federal authorities could pass decisions that limit the religious  rights. However, local district and regional courts took the  administration’s side, ruling that the constitution had not been  violated.

“Restrictions in appearance ensure normal functioning of  educational institutions and equality of students belonging to  different faiths and denominations. The appearance of students  should comply with the official style and be secular,” read the  ruling of the Stavropol Regional Court. It also added that  freedom of religion cannot be tied to the right to wear religious  attributes and that the ban protected the equality of all faiths.

The Muslims turned to the Supreme Court, but on Wednesday their  appeal was turned down. At the session, the representative of the  Stavropol administration reiterated the position that the school  regulations concerning dress did not prevent Muslims from  believing in God and were therefore not infringing anyone’s  rights.

The defense team said they would now appeal the case in the  Supreme Court Presidium, the final right of recourse within  Russia. They also noted that it was unlikely that they would turn  to the European Human Rights Court as they expected it to take  the side of the regional authorities.

The majority of the Stavropol Region’s about 280,000-strong  population is comprised of ethnic Russians who are Orthodox  Christians. But in recent years more and more Muslims from  neighboring North Caucasus republics have been settling in the  area and many Russians are leaving for central regions.

Earlier, the ban on religious clothes in schools was also  introduced in the Muslim-dominated regions of Bashkiriya, Adygeya  and Dagestan, but there the population chose not to protest  against these rules.

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