Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Can't Grow Beard In Armed Forces On Religious Ground: SC

Darpan News Desk, 15 Dec, 2016 12:56 PM
    The Supreme Court on Thursday rejected a plea by an IAF personnel seeking to grow a beard and said that the IAF's policies on personal appearance were not intended to discriminate against religious beliefs.
     
    "Regulation and policies in regard to personal appearances are not intended to discriminate against religious beliefs, nor do they have the affect of doing so," a bench of Chief Justice T.S. Thakur, Justice D.Y. Chandrachud and Justice L. Nageswara Rao said while rejecting the plea by Mohammed Zubair. 
     
    Zubair, who joined the Indian Air Force on December 19, 2001, has since been discharged from service. 
     
    Zubair had on January 10, 2005, applied for permission to sport a beard but the plea was rejected by the Air Officer Commanding. He subsequently challenged in the court the directions to shave off his beard.
     
    "Their (regulation and policies) object and purpose is to ensure uniformity, cohesiveness, discipline and order which are indispensable to the Air Force, as indeed to every armed force," the ruling said.
     
    Speaking for the bench, Justice Chandrachud said: "India is a secular nation in which every religion must be treated with equality. In the context of the Armed Forces, which comprise men and women following a multitude of faiths, the needs of secular India are accommodated by recognising the right of worship and by respecting religious beliefs." 
     
    "Yet, in a constitutional sense, it cannot be overlooked that the overarching necessity of a force -- which has been raised to protect the nation -- is to maintain discipline," the judgment said.
     
    That is why, the court said, "the Constitution in the provisions of Article 33 stipulates that Parliament may by law determine to what extent the Fundamental Rights ... shall stand restricted or abrogated in relation inter alia to the members of the Armed Forces so as to ensure the proper discharge of their duties and the maintenance of discipline among them".
     
    The petitioner had moved the apex court to challenge the Punjab and Haryana High Court judgment that held that maintaining a beard was not an integral part of the religion professed by him.
     
    The High Court further held that the matter pertained to the Armed Forces, where a certain degree of discipline had to be maintained, and that the rules and regulations broadly accommodate "the basic interest of various religions in a secular manner".

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Brief Renaming Of Vancouver's Trump Tower Prompts Apology From Google Maps

    Brief Renaming Of Vancouver's Trump Tower Prompts Apology From Google Maps
    Google Maps is apologizing for what it says were inappropriate names used for Trump landmarks that surfaced on its maps over the weekend, including in Vancouver.

    Brief Renaming Of Vancouver's Trump Tower Prompts Apology From Google Maps

    Child Porn Charges For Dawson Creek, B.C., Man After Abbotsford Police Probe

    A Dawson Creek, B.C., man has been charged with child pornography offences following an investigation that spanned the province.

    Child Porn Charges For Dawson Creek, B.C., Man After Abbotsford Police Probe

    Trump Tower Becomes 'Dump Tower' On Google Maps

    Trump Tower Becomes 'Dump Tower' On Google Maps
    Someone has renamed Donald Trump's midtown Manhattan building on Google Maps, and the new moniker isn't very flattering.

    Trump Tower Becomes 'Dump Tower' On Google Maps

    Top Soldier Angry, Disappointed Sexual Misconduct Still Major Problem

    Top Soldier Angry, Disappointed Sexual Misconduct Still Major Problem
    The study's findings include an estimated 960 men and women who say they were sexually assaulted in the last year — some of which occurred after the last time Gen. Jonathan Vance read the riot act to members of the Canadian Forces.

    Top Soldier Angry, Disappointed Sexual Misconduct Still Major Problem

    Trial Begins For Calgary Woman In Death Of Seven-year-old Son From Strep Infection

    Trial Begins For Calgary Woman In Death Of Seven-year-old Son From Strep Infection
    Tamara Lovett, who is 47, is charged with failing to provide the necessaries of life and with criminal negligence causing the death of her son.

    Trial Begins For Calgary Woman In Death Of Seven-year-old Son From Strep Infection

    Police Say 'Grand Theft Auto' Prompted Boy, 11, To Drive On Highway 400 In Vaughan, Ont.

    Police Say 'Grand Theft Auto' Prompted Boy, 11, To Drive On Highway 400 In Vaughan, Ont.
    Police got a call late Saturday night about a vehicle that was "all over the road" on Highway 400 in Vaughan, Ont.

    Police Say 'Grand Theft Auto' Prompted Boy, 11, To Drive On Highway 400 In Vaughan, Ont.