Close X
Friday, November 8, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Hairdresser Denies Salon Entry To Hijab-Clad Woman In Norway

IANS, 06 Sep, 2016 11:46 AM
    A 47-year-old Norwegian hairdresser who threw a hijab-clad woman out of her salon saying, she did not want "evil" in her establishment could be sentenced to six months in jail after refusing to pay a fine of 800 pounds.
     
    Merete Hodne is due to appear in court this week after the incident was reported to the police in October last year. "Islam is evil. It would have been discriminatory against her other customers if she had not thrown Malika Bayan out of the establishment," Hodne said.
     
    Malika Bayan, 23, reportedly went to Hodne's salon in the town of Bryne in October last year to enquire how much it would cost to colour her hair, but Hodne told her to leave, Daily Express reported today.
     
    "It is disturbing that she treats people this way in a free country. Norway is my country. She talks about that Islam is oppressive to women, but it is she who oppress me," Bayan said.
     
    "Evil is Islam's ideology, Mohammedanism and the hijab are symbols of this ideology. I'm not afraid to lose but I won't pay for something that is wrong. I'll appeal to the court of human rights," Hodne added.
     
    The hairdresser was initially fined 800 pounds by the police in April for discrimination over the incident, but after refusing to pay, Hodne now faces a court appearance Thursday in the first case of its kind in Norway.
     
    Hodne risks six months in jail if she is found to have discriminated against the Muslim woman.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Radio Stations Hungry For New Christmas Songs But Find Few Enduring Hits

    Radio Stations Hungry For New Christmas Songs But Find Few Enduring Hits
    TORONTO — The sounds of the holiday season are pretty much the same from year to year: "Feliz Navidad," "Baby, It's Cold Outside" and "White Christmas" on constant rotation in supermarkets, department stores and coffee shops.

    Radio Stations Hungry For New Christmas Songs But Find Few Enduring Hits

    Marketing The Holidays A Tricky Balancing Act For Businesses In Canada

    Marketing The Holidays A Tricky Balancing Act For Businesses In Canada
    TORONTO — When something as simple as a red Starbucks cup stirred a controversy stateside over how businesses mark the approach of Christmas, Canadian retailers took notice.

    Marketing The Holidays A Tricky Balancing Act For Businesses In Canada

    International Fashion Brand Esprit Set To Re-enter Canadian Market Next Year

    International Fashion Brand Esprit Set To Re-enter Canadian Market Next Year
    The international fashion brand is teaming up with Montreal-based distributor Freemark Apparel Brands (FAB Inc.) to open stand-alone stores in Canada next spring.

    International Fashion Brand Esprit Set To Re-enter Canadian Market Next Year

    Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella To Visit T-Hub, Address Budding Entrepreneurs

    Jayesh Ranjan, secretary for information technology in the Telangana government, told IANS on Wednesday that Nadella will be taken around the facility located at the International Institute of Information Technology (IIIT), Hyderabad.

    Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella To Visit T-Hub, Address Budding Entrepreneurs

    Self-Cleaning Litter Box And Other High-Tech Products Fuel Profits At Online Pet Supply Store

    Self-Cleaning Litter Box And Other High-Tech Products Fuel Profits At Online Pet Supply Store
    Heather and Bobby Hill found their pot of gold in cat poop. Sales of a litter box that automatically cleans itself have been creeping up for years but in the last two, they grew nearly 400 per cent and turned December

    Self-Cleaning Litter Box And Other High-Tech Products Fuel Profits At Online Pet Supply Store

    When A Car Driving Itself Suddenly Needs A Person To Take Over - Will The Person Be Ready?

    When A Car Driving Itself Suddenly Needs A Person To Take Over - Will The Person Be Ready?
    LOS ANGELES — New cars that can steer and brake themselves risk lulling people in the driver's seat into a false sense of security — and even to sleep. One way to keep people alert may be providing distractions that are now illegal.

    When A Car Driving Itself Suddenly Needs A Person To Take Over - Will The Person Be Ready?