Karnataka's interim order on hijabs only for students, not teachers: HC
text_fieldsBengaluru: The Karnataka High Court on Wednesday clarified that the temporary ban on religious attires such as the hijab and saffron scarves in schools and colleges of state applies only to students and not teachers.
On Wednesday, Mohammad Tahir, an advocate representing one of the student petitioners in the ongoing hijab ban case had stated that teachers too were being stopped at the gates.
Following this, Chief Justice Ritu Raj Awasthi clarified that its order applied only to students.
The court also clarified that its February 10 order will apply to both the degree colleges and pre-university colleges where the uniform had been prescribed.
The Karnataka High Court had temporarily banned religious clothes earlier this month as the controversy over Muslim students wearing hijabs in classrooms spread across the state and led to a case.
Teachers along with students were not allowed to enter schools and colleges for wearing the hijab in many parts of the state since then.
The controversy over the hijab erupted in Karnataka late last year after some college students in the Udupi district were stopped from wearing the religious headscarves in classrooms.
The standoff quickly spread to other parts of the state and even beyond and saw demonstrations and ugly face-offs as some Hindu groups opposed to the hijab held protests in schools and colleges wearing saffron scarves.
On February 5, Karnataka banned "clothes that were against law and order" and on February 10 the High Court temporarily banned all religious outfits as it heard petitions challenging the restrictions.
The petitioners, including a dozen Muslim female students, have told the court that wearing the hijab was a fundamental right guaranteed under India's constitution and essential practice of Islam.
Karnataka's advocate-general, Prabhuling Navadgi, has told the High Court there that those challenging the decision had not been able to prove that wearing the hijab was an essential religious practice.
Karnataka's move has led to protests in some other parts of the country and drawn criticism from the United States and the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation.