Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Groups Say Quebec Bill On Religious Symbols Violates Minority Rights

The Canadian Press, 29 Mar, 2019 09:26 PM

    MONTREAL — Groups defending the rights of minorities and women have come together to denounce Quebec's new legislation restricting the wearing of religious symbols.


    Seven groups including Amnesty International and the province's main women's federation attacked the secularism bill as discriminatory at a news conference today.


    France-Isabelle Langlois, Amnesty International's director for French-speaking Canada said the Coalition Avenir Quebec bill contravenes the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which guarantees freedom of thought, conscience and religion.


    The legislation tabled Thursday would prohibit public servants in positions of authority — including teachers, police officers, Crown prosecutors and prison guards — from wearing religious symbols. People currently in those jobs would be protected by a grandfather clause.


    Idil Issa, vice-president of the Fondation Parole de femmes, which represents women from visible minorities, said Muslim women wearing the hijab will bear the brunt of the law's impact. She said she fears they will be stigmatized and subjected to violence in everyday life.


    The groups are asking that the bill be withdrawn, but they acknowledge the battle will be difficult because the government has invoked the notwithstanding clause to block possible court challenges.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Hurt During Arrest For Alleged Slurs At B.C. Vigil For New Zealand Victims

    Surrey RCMP say it happened Sunday afternoon at the pre-planned event in the city's civic plaza.    

    Man Hurt During Arrest For Alleged Slurs At B.C. Vigil For New Zealand Victims

    Audain Prize For Visual Art Raised To $100,000, To Boost Profile Of B.C. Artists

    VANCOUVER — A foundation that supports the visual arts, mainly in British Columbia, is more than tripling the value of the Audain Prize for Visual Art, awarded annually to a distinguished B.C. artist.

    Audain Prize For Visual Art Raised To $100,000, To Boost Profile Of B.C. Artists

    Man Arrested In British Columbia On Murder Charge In Toronto

    Man Arrested In British Columbia On Murder Charge In Toronto
    Police say they stopped a man who was riding a bicycle without a helmet in Nanaimo on Friday.    

    Man Arrested In British Columbia On Murder Charge In Toronto

    RCMP Say Disappearance Of B.C. Cowboy Ben Tyner 'May Involve Criminality'

    The case of a rancher who has been missing in British Columbia since January is being treated as a suspicious disappearance by the RCMP.  

    RCMP Say Disappearance Of B.C. Cowboy Ben Tyner 'May Involve Criminality'

    Wilderness Survival Book Borrowed In 1977 Is Finally Returned To B.C. Library

    VANCOUVER — A book about surviving in the outdoors has been returned to a B.C. library branch more than four decades after it was checked out.

    Wilderness Survival Book Borrowed In 1977 Is Finally Returned To B.C. Library

    B.C. Court Of Appeal Will Begin Hearing Oil-Transport Reference Case Today

    B.C. Court Of Appeal Will Begin Hearing Oil-Transport Reference Case Today
    British Columbia's Court of Appeal will consider the question of provincial powers over the future of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project during a five-day hearing that starts today.

    B.C. Court Of Appeal Will Begin Hearing Oil-Transport Reference Case Today