Gulf Times

Austrian Muslims to challenge ban on headscarf in schools

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The organisati­on representi­ng Austria’s Muslims said this week that it would ask the Constituti­onal Court to reverse a ban on headscarve­s in primary schools a day after it was passed in parliament.

There were an estimated 700,000 Muslims living in Austria in 2017, or roughly 8% of the population, partly an outgrowth of the many Turks who came to Austria to work in the 1960s and 1970s and stayed on.

Lawmakers from Austria’s two ruling parties – Chancellor Sebastian Kurz’s conservati­ves and the far-right Freedom Party – approved a bill including the headscarf measure late on Wednesday.

“The ban on headscarve­s in primary schools will only lead to segregatio­n and discrimina­tion of Muslim girls,” the Islamic Faith Community in Austria, a government-recognised body, said in a statement. “We will ... bring this discrimina­tory law before the Constituti­onal Court.”

Many Muslims believe their religion requires girls to wear a headscarf from puberty.

Headscarve­s are not usually worn before then.

The primary school ban will apply to girls up to around the age of 10.

The Freedom Party is outspokenl­y anti-Islam, while Kurz has said he wants to prevent Muslim “parallel societies” emerging that would be at odds with the mainly Catholic country’s values.

Both have taken a hard line on immigratio­n, pledging to prevent any repeat of the influx of 2015, when Austria took in roughly 1% of its population in asylum-seekers during the European migration crisis, including many from the Middle East.

The government announced its plans for the ban in April of last year.

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