Sunday, March 19, 2017

​EUROPE : Anglicans and Jews against EU ban on religious symbols in the workplace

http://www.asianews.it/files/img/EUROPA_-_ISLAM_-_Velo.jpgThe Church of England and Jewish groups have criticised a European Court of Justice (ECJ) ruling that allows employers to ban religious symbols from the workplace.
 
The issue was brought before the court by two Muslim women who were fired for refusing to remove their headscarf.

The two cases have reignited the debate over religious freedom, with Christians and Jews getting involved.

The Court was asked to rule on two cases, one from Belgium and the other from France. the plaintiffs are Samira Achbita, who worked at G4S Secure Solutions NV, and Asma Bougnaoui, who worked for IT consultancy firm Micropole SA.

According to the ECJ, there was no discrimination in the Belgian case because the employee was aware of the unwritten rule that required dress code neutrality for all employees.

The French case was different. Here the Court referred the final decision to national courts. 

It also noted that the ban might be discriminatory because it was due to complaints from a customer.

Under EU law, an employer can fire an employee who does not abide by company policies, but must have a valid reason and the decision must be proportionate.

According to the Court, the desire to maintain a neutral secular corporate image falls within the rules.

Some religious leaders strongly reacted to the rulings. Although they do not relate specifically to Islamic headscarf, their underlying principle can apply to all religious symbols.

The Anglican Church of England slammed the decision, saying that it would prevent Christians from exercising their religious freedom.

"This judgment,” said the Rt Revd Nicholas Baines, the Bishop of Leeds, “once again raises vital questions about freedom of expression, not just freedom of religion, and shows that the denial of freedom of religion is not a neutral act, contrary to how it might be portrayed."

The president of the Conference of European Rabbis, Chief Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt, agrees. "This decision sends a signal to all religious groups in Europe”, namely that faith communities are not welcome.

In Europe, the debate on religious symbols is a complex one, and the law varies from place to place.

One example is the ruling by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) in a 2013 case in which a British Airways employee was fired for refusing to hide a gold cross around her neck.

According to the ECHR, the dismissal was unlawful because the airline company had allowed, at the same time, Muslim employees to cover their head.

Some NGOs also reacted. For the Open Society Justice Initiative, a branch of US-based Open Society Foundations, the ruling weakens the guarantee offered by the European Union's anti-discrimination laws.

"In many member states, national laws will still recognise that banning religious headscarves at work is discrimination," policy office Maryam Hmadoun said. "But in places where national law is weak, this ruling will exclude many Muslim women from the workplace." 

Amnesty International welcomed the ruling on the French case that "employers are not at liberty to pander to the prejudices of their clients". But, it added that bans on religious symbols to show neutrality opens "a backdoor to precisely such prejudice". 

At the national level within the European Union, many cases have come to the fore involving Christian crosses, Jewish skullcaps and Sikh turbans.