SIKHS Win School Turban Ban Case Against France in the UN
"The
UN Human Rights Committee has made our nine year wait for justice
worthwhile, since the French law was passed against religious signs in
public schools in 2004. The UNHRC has once again proved to be the beacon
of light for the freedom of thought, conscience and religion by
upholding that the Article 18 right under the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) to manifest ones religion, cannot be
overridden merely by pleading secularity without producing any evidence
that the Sikh Turban would affect the right of other students or would
affect order in the school," said Mejindarpal Kaur, UNITED SIKHS Legal
Director, who is in the fore-front of a legal campaign for French Sikhs'
right to wear their turban.
Paris, France, 14 Dec 2012
– The UN Human Rights Committee has ruled that France's ban on the
wearing of "conspicuous" religious symbols in schools - introduced in a
law adopted in March 2004 - violated a Sikh student's right to manifest
his religion, protected by the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights (ICCPR). In a decision that was sent out this week to
the UNITED SIKHS legal team, in relation to a complaint made by
Bikramjit Singh in 2008, the Committee accepted that the wearing of a
turban is regarded as a religious duty for a Sikh and is also tied in
with his identity; and that France had not justified the prohibition on
the wearing of the turban.
The Committee accepted that the
France was entitled to uphold the principle of secularism (laïcité), a
means by which a State party might seek to protect the religious
freedom of all its population; it recognised that the adoption of the
2004 law had responded to actual incidents of interference with the
religious freedom of pupils and sometimes even threats to their physical
safety.
However, the Committee went on to
express the opinion that this was not enough to justify the
interference with religious rights that the law represented. France had
"not furnished compelling evidence that by wearing his keski (small
turban) [Bikramjit] would have posed a threat to the rights and freedoms
of other pupils or to order at the school. The Committee also
considered that the penalty of permanent exclusion had not been shown to
be necessary; and that it had been imposed not because of any harmful
conduct by Bikramjit, but because he belonged to a broad category of
people by their religious conduct. In the Committee's view, France had
not shown "how the sacrifice of those persons' rights is either
necessary or proportionate to the benefits achieved". You may read the
Committees views in full
here. The views were adopted on 1st Nov 2012, at the 106th session of the Committee's sitting.
Less than a year ago, the UNHRC
had also concluded that France had violated the religious freedom of 76
year old Ranjit Singh when he was asked to remove his turban for his ID
photograph. A UN decision is still awaited for Shingara Singh, whose
passport has not been renewed by France because he refused to remove his
turban for his ID photograph.
Mejindarpal Kaur, UNITED SIKHS
International Legal Director told a media conference in Paris today:
"Laicite or secularity is not an end in itself; it is a means to an end.
The end that laicite must achieve is freedom, equality and fraternity.
Likewise the Turban is a means to an end and Sikhs in France will
continue to wear the turban so they may work towards a society that is
free, fair and for the good of all mankind."
"We now look to France to fulfil
its treaty obligations under International law. It also has a moral duty
to ensure that the freedom of religion and belief is upheld for
everyone who lives within its territory," she added.
Stephen Grosz of London
solicitors Bindmans, who was instructed by UNITED SIKHS to represent
Bikramjit Singh, said: "The UN Human Rights Committee is the first
international body examine the substantive merits of France's ban on
religious symbols and clothing in schools. In this significant ruling,
it has made clear that the prohibition is unjustified. France must now
prevent similar violations in future, and in particular, the Committee
said that it should review the law of 2004 that imposed the ban.
France must also provide Bikramjit Singh with a remedy, including
appropriate compensation. France has 180 days to explain to the
Committee how it proposes to give effect to the decision.
Bikramjit Singh, whose religious
rights the UN decided had been violated, said, "I am very pleased with
the UN's decision and would like to reassure the French government that
we are in favour of secularity, in its true sense. The Sikh turban
stands for liberty, equality and fraternity because the right to wear a
Turban is open to all - men and women, rich and poor.
"In fact, the Turban is a symbol
of laicite- it does not discriminate. The Turban is not a sign of
oppression. It's a practice of freedom," added Bikramjit Singh, who
after being expelled from school, completed his education privately and
is now a project engineer with an engineering firm in Paris.
President of the Delhi Sikh
Gurdwara Management Committee, Paramjit Singh said in a telephone
interview: "Bikramjit Singh is an Indian national and it should have
been the responsibility of the Indian government to protect his
religious freedom abroad so that he and other Sikhs were not banned from
wearing the turban in French public schools. Instead it took an NGO,
UNITED SIKHS, to take up and win this case at the UN. We are very proud
of UNITED SIKHS and congratulate the global Sikh community for the
victory at the UN. I will personally ensure that this issue is raised at
the Indian Parliament to ensure that France complies with the UN's
decision and reverses the ban on the turban in schools".
"Religion and politics are two
wheels that balance civil society. If one wheel comes off, society
ceases to be stable. Laicite or secularity is the oil that ensures that
the two wheels keep moving. Sikhs do not see laicite as the enemy. We
see it as our friend to help us be good citizens." Said Shingara Singh,
UNITED SIKHS-France Director.
"Our stand for the turban will
not only benefit France but the whole world. It is not a coincidence
that this battle of the turban is being fought in France - a country
that lives by laicite. The Turban will show the world that the true
meaning of laicite can only be achieved if its people are allowed to be
free to practice their faith," said Gurdial Singh of the Turban Action
Committee of France, who has been defending campaign relentlessly.
You may read a previous press release on our advocacy for religious freedom at the United Nations
here.
Issued By-
Mejindarpal Kaur
Legal Director, International Civil and Human Rights Advocacy (ICHRA)
UNITED SIKHS
Tel: +33 625936599 / +44 8701993328
law@unitedsikhs.org
sources:http://www.unitedsikhs.org/PressReleases/PRSRLS-12-01-2012-00.html
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