Close X
Friday, November 8, 2024
ADVT 
International

Aqilah Sandhu, Muslim Woman Wins Right To Wear Headscarf At Work In Germany

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 Jul, 2016 01:10 PM
    A 25-year-old Muslim lawyer in Germany has won the right to wear a headscarf at work after a court ruled that there was no legal basis for the state of Bavaria to prevent her from doing so.
     
    Aqilah Sandhu, a star student at Augsburg University law faculty, began a traineeship with the Bavarian judicial system after completing her state law exams, but was told in a letter that she was not allowed to interrogate witnesses or appear in courtrooms while wearing her headscarf.
     
    The battle started after Sandhu successfully completed her state exams and started a traineeship with the Bavarian judicial system.
     
    In July 2014, the highest court in the state sent her a letter informing her that she was forbidden from interrogating witnesses or fulfilling other legal duties as long as she continued to wear a headscarf, the Local reported.
     
    "As soon as I saw the letter I knew it was unlawful," she told the court on Thursday.
     
    She immediately asked for an explanation of the ban, to which she was told "(religious) clothing and symbols can impair the trust in the religious neutrality of the administration of justice."
     
    But the state of Bavaria has no law forbidding legal trainees from wearing religious symbols, so Sandhu took the Bavarian legal system to court.
     
    "I felt very strongly discriminated against. I felt neglected in my training," Sandhu was quoted as saying. She described how she was excluded from certain activities of the traineeship because of her headscarf.
     
     
    On one occasion the judge who was training her would only allow her to see pictures that were part of a court process after the process was over, as otherwise she would have had to step up to the judges' desk -- an area she was forbidden from entering.
     
    "I believe in the principle of merit here in Germany and I think it is a shame that I am being reduced to my outward appearance," Sandhu said.
     
    Judge Bernhard Rothinger decided that the young lawyer was in the right, agreeing that there was no legal basis for the state's attack on her religious freedom.
     
    Sandhu is now seeking compensation of 2,000 euros, Bild reported.
     
    But the Bavarian state has rejected the court's decision and says it will appeal.
     
    "I don't want legal apprentices sitting in court or carrying out other high duties of the state wearing headscarves," said Bavarian justice minister Winfried Bausback.
     
    Last year the Constitutional Court ruled against blanket bans on teachers wearing headscarves -- in force in half of Germany's 16 states -- saying that they were "constitutionally limiting".

    MORE International ARTICLES

    ‘David Headley's Disclosures Will Expose Pakistan To The World'

    ‘David Headley's Disclosures Will Expose Pakistan To The World'
    Expecting that the world would take a "serious note" of Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorist-turned-approver David Coleman Headley's revelations on the devastating 26/11 Mumbai attack that claimed 166 lives

    ‘David Headley's Disclosures Will Expose Pakistan To The World'

    Britain's Independent Newspaper To Cease Print Editions

    Britain's Independent Newspaper To Cease Print Editions
    ESI Media said The Independent's final paper edition will appear March 26. Sister paper the Independent on Sunday will end with the March 20 issue.

    Britain's Independent Newspaper To Cease Print Editions

    Tour Operators Say Zika Could Be Bad For Olympics Business

    Tour Operators Say Zika Could Be Bad For Olympics Business
    "It could be catastrophic," Jerri Roush, director of operations of Cartan Tours, told The Associated Press. "It's uncharted territory."

    Tour Operators Say Zika Could Be Bad For Olympics Business

    India-Born Masood Khan Wins $3.1 Million Discrimination Suit Against Chicago Police Department

    India-Born Masood Khan Wins $3.1 Million Discrimination Suit Against Chicago Police Department
    Masood Khan won $3.1 million in compensation, along with Glenford Flowers, a Belize-born man, as victims of the discriminatory hiring policy

    India-Born Masood Khan Wins $3.1 Million Discrimination Suit Against Chicago Police Department

    Indian American Pavithra Nagarajan Danseuse Named For US Presidential Scholars

    Indian American Pavithra Nagarajan Danseuse Named For US Presidential Scholars
    An Indian American danseuse has been nominated for 2016 US Presidential Scholars in the Arts, one of the nation's highest honours for high school students.

    Indian American Pavithra Nagarajan Danseuse Named For US Presidential Scholars

    UK Newspaper Takes Stand On ‘Hindu Nationalism’, To Use Bombay, Not Mumbai

    UK Newspaper Takes Stand On ‘Hindu Nationalism’, To Use Bombay, Not Mumbai
    The city's name was officially changed to Mumbai in 1995 to distance itself from the colonial term - Bombay.

    UK Newspaper Takes Stand On ‘Hindu Nationalism’, To Use Bombay, Not Mumbai