Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

EU court rules workplace headscarf ban legal

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LUXEMBOURG — European companies can ban employees from wearing religious or political symbols including the Islamic headscarf, the EU’s top court ruled yesterday in a landmark case.

The European Court of Justice (ECJ) said it does not constitute “direct discrimina­tion” if a firm has an internal rule banning the wearing of “any political, philosophi­cal or religious sign”.

The Luxembourg-based court was ruling on the case of a Muslim woman fired by the security company G4S in Belgium after she insisted on wearing a headscarf.

The wearing of religious symbols, and especially Islamic symbols such as the headscarf, has become a hot button issue with the rise of populist sentiment across Europe, with some countries such as Austria considerin­g a complete ban on the full-face veil in public.

Manfred Weber, head of the centre-right European People’s Party, the biggest in the European Parliament, welcomed the ruling.

“Important ruling by the European Court of Justice: employers have the right to ban the Islamic veil at work. European values must apply in public life,” Weber said in a tweet.

The ECJ was ruling on a case dating to 2003 when Samira Achbita, a Muslim, was employed as a receptioni­st by G4S security services in Belgium.

At the time, the company had an “unwritten rule” that employees should not wear any political, religious or philosophi­cal symbols at work, the ECJ said.

In 2006, Achbita told G4S she wanted to wear the Islamic headscarf at work but was told this would not be allowed.

Subsequent­ly, the company introduced a formal ban. Achbita was dismissed and she went to court claiming discrimina­tion.

The ECJ said European Union law does bar discrimina­tion on religious grounds, but G4S’s actions were based on treating all employees the same, meaning no one person was singled out for applicatio­n of the ban.— AFP.

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