Waterloo Region Record

Clear rules needed on section of Quebec face covering law: judge

- Giuseppe Valiante

MONTREAL — A Superior Court justice on Friday ordered a temporary stay on the provision of a controvers­ial Quebec law that prohibits citizens from receiving or giving public services with their faces covered.

Justice Babak Barin ruled that Quebec cannot force people to uncover their faces until the province establishe­s clear guidelines under which someone can apply for a religious accommodat­ion.

Bill 62 was passed in October and was criticized for targeting Muslim women because they are among the few people in society who wear face veils.

Section 10 of the law forces everyone to show their face when receiving or giving a public service and section 11 allows citizens to be exempted from that rule if they are granted an accommodat­ion for religious reasons. But section 11 is not yet in force. The government gave itself until next summer to establish the guidelines for religious accommodat­ion requests.

The law was challenged by the National Council of Canadian Muslims and the Canadian Civil Liberties Associatio­n.

Barin granted a temporary stay only — until the government creates guidelines for religious accommodat­ions.

The judge suggested the law is neither complete nor fully coherent. “It is not unreasonab­le to expect that a state religious neutrality law enacted by the government should apply in a well-thought-out and comprehens­ive manner, especially when the law in question has been in preparatio­n for some time,” he wrote in his ruling.

“In the interim, noble as the ideology of state religious neutrality may be, the government must ensure that the law it is adopting for the public good is coherent and complete.”

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