NEW DELHI: A high court in India’s southern state of Karnataka upheld on Tuesday a ban on the wearing of hijab in classrooms, in a decision that said the Muslim head covering is not a part of “essential religious practice.”
The controversy took off in late January after Muslim girls at a government-run secondary school in Karnataka’s Udupi district began protesting a new rule that prevented them from attending classes if they wore the hijab.
After the local administration backed the school and banned the wearing of the hijab and “clothes which disturbed peace” at educational institutions, a small peaceful protest held by the Udupi schoolgirls grew into rallies that spilled to other states.
The Karnataka High Court decision comes after weeks of deliberations following petitions arguing that India’s constitution guaranteed Muslim women the right to wear headscarves.
The court dismissed the pleas, saying the state government had the right to prescribe uniforms for students.
“The school regulations prescribing dress code for all the students as one homogenous class, serve constitutional secularism,” Chief Justice Ritu Raj Awasthi of the Karnataka High Court said in the judgment.
“We are of the considered opinion that wearing of hijab by Muslim women does not form a part of essential religious practice.”
The court also said that students cannot object to school uniform, as prescribing it is a “reasonable restriction, constitutionally permissible.”
Activists fear the hijab ban could pave the way for further discriminatory measures targeting the Muslim community, which makes up about 12 percent of the population in Karnataka, a state that is a stronghold of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party.
“The verdict is unacceptable, unjust and violates human rights, constitutional rights and dehumanizing Muslim women and a disturbing precedent,” student activist Afreen Fatima said.
“The ruling BJP and the right-wing forces have co-opted Indian institutions and the court is also becoming a tool in the hands of the majoritarian forces to further humiliate Muslims.”
Since coming to power in 2019, the local government has passed a series of rules seen as discriminating against Muslims and other religious minorities, including regulations making it difficult for interfaith couples to marry, and for people to convert to Islam or Christianity.
Poet and teacher Nabiya Khan, who wears the hijab, said the verdict is “emotionally exhausting.”
Shayma S, Muslim activist and doctoral student at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi, told Arab News it amounted to “literal denial of education and women’s right to exercise their choice.”
“The rights of the minorities are being violated in many ways, this is one more layer to that violation,” she said, as she expressed hope that the Karnataka ruling will be reversed.
Anas Tanveer, a lawyer representing the petitioners, said the decision is going to be appealed against in the Supreme Court.
“The court has gone into essential religious practice when it should not have,” he told Arab News.
“The question essentially is whether the state has power to issue such notifications which are against the law, the statute or the rules.”
Indian court upholds state ban on hijab in schools and colleges
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Indian court upholds state ban on hijab in schools and colleges
- Controversy took off in late January after Muslim girls in Karnataka were prevented them from attending classes if they wore the hijab
- Local administration backed the school and banned the wearing of the hijab and ‘clothes which disturbed peace’ at educational institutions