Turkey says EU headscarf ruling to 'strengthen anti-Muslim trend'

A decision by the European Union's top court to allow companies to ban employees wearing headscarves is already attracting criticism.

Hijab House sells more than 100 thousand hijabs a year.

File image. Source: SBS Small Business Secrets

Turkey on Tuesday attacked a ruling by the EU's top court that European companies can ban employees from wearing religious or political symbols including the Islamic headscarf, saying it would intensify anti-Muslim sentiment.

"The European Court of Justice decision on the headscarf today will only strengthen anti-Muslim and xenophobic trends," Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's spokesman Ibrahim Kalin said in a tweet.

"Quo vadis Europa? (Where is Europe going?)" he said.

The response came as Turkey is locked in a mighty row with Germany, the Netherlands and other EU states over the blocking of Turkish officials from holding rallies abroad in the campaign for a referendum on expanding Erdogan's powers.



The European Court of Justice (ECJ) said it does not constitute "direct discrimination" if a firm has an internal rule banning the wearing of "any political, philosophical or religious sign".

The Luxembourg-based court was considering the case of a Muslim woman fired by the security company G4S in Belgium after she insisted on wearing a headscarf.

Turkey last month said it was lifting a historic ban on female officers wearing the Islamic headscarf in the country's officially secular armed forces, the last institution where the wearing of the garment was forbidden.

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2 min read
Published 15 March 2017 7:56am
Updated 15 March 2017 5:23pm
Source: AFP


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