Turkey criticises European court's ruling on headscarf ban
- Country:
- Turkey
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's spokesman on Sunday condemned a European Union court decision to allow employers to ban staff wearing Muslim headscarves as appeasing Islamophobia.
“The decision by the European Court of Justice on headscarves in the workplace is another blow to the rights of Muslim women with headscarves and will play right into the hands of those warmongers against Islam in Europe,” Ibrahim Kalin tweeted.
“Does the concept of religious freedom now exclude Muslims?!” The European Court of Justice on Thursday ruled that companies can ban employees wearing religious or political symbols if firms “desire to pursue a policy of political, philosophical and religious neutrality concerning its customers or users.'' The ruling applies to any symbols where there is a “genuine need” for a ban.
The Luxembourg-based court's ruling reaffirms a 2017 decision. The case has been seen as contradicting a European Court of Human Rights decision from 2013 that allowed Christian crosses to be worn at work.
The Turkish Foreign Ministry said in a statement Sunday that the latest decision came as “Islamophobia, racism, and hatred that have taken Europe hostage are rising, disregards religious freedom and creates a basis and legal cover for discrimination.” Erdogan's government often criticizes Western institutions for what it says are attacks on Muslim citizens' rights.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
ALSO READ
US State Secy Blinken speaks to Turkish, Chinese, Saudi counterparts on avoiding escalation in Middle East
ANALYSIS-Climate verdict for Swiss women a warning for European states, oil industry
Blue-chips power European stocks higher on rate cut hopes
European court ruling puts cautious Swiss in climate bind
European court decision shows that a safe climate is a human right, former UN rights chief says