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Published: Wed, 24 Feb
2005
British Sikhs Back
Declaration on Religious Freedom
By Mustafa Abdel-Halim,
IOL Staff
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“This is a very
difficult task to achieve, but not impossible if all Muslims in
Europe and human rights activists could join forces and act in
unison,”
said Pharaon.
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CAIRO, February 24, 2005
(IslamOnline.net) – A few hours after a multi-party group of
European legislators submitted a written declaration on religious
freedom to the European Parliament, a leading British Sikhs group
reiterated support for the campaign.
The United Sikh organisation in the UK contacted the London-based
Assembly for the Protection of Hijab to join the drive which seeks a
European Parliament resolution against banning religious symbols,
Abeer Pharaon, the assembly’s coordinator, told IslamOnline.net on
Thursday, February 24.
The
Written Declaration on Freedom of Religious Expression maintains
that a ban on the Christian cross, Jewish skullcap, Muslim hijab and
Sikh turban is an infringement of human rights, in particular
Article 9 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
It criticizes France’s ban on what it calls the display of
“conspicuous religious symbols” in state-run schools.
“The ban violates the human rights of free expression and freedom to
practice religion, undermines multiculturalism and is likely to
create tension and racist attacks,” MEP Caroline Lucas told a press
conference Wednesday, February 23, after she and four other MEPs
submitted the declaration to the officials in the European
Parliament’s Strasbourg headquarters.
First Step
The written declaration is co-sponsored the Assembly for the
Protection of Hijab, which was founded in 2004 in response to a
growing anti-hijab campaign worldwide.
“It is a first step in our campaign,” Pharaon said, adding the press
conference was attended by reporters from several media
organisations as well as Muslim supporters.
A written declaration in the European Parliament is a means for MEPs
to make a political statement on a particular issue.
To become a resolution debated in the Parliament, at least 310 MEPs,
half of the parliament, must sign it within 3 months, otherwise it
lapses.
“This is a very difficult task to achieve, but not impossible if all
Muslims in Europe [approximately 20 million of Europe’s 200 million
population] and human rights activists could join forces and act in
unison,” said Pharaon.
During the past five years, only six of 161 declarations presented
to the European Parliament were adopted, including a ban on using
dog fur in December 2003.
“These declarations seek to preserve the rights of animals. So why
do not they care about us, humans,” said Pharaon.
Hijab has taken central stage in several European countries,
especially after France banned what it described as religious
symbols in state-run schools and public institutions.
Islam sees hijab as an obligatory code of dress, not a religious
symbol displaying one’s affiliations.
The US-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) lambasted the French move as
“discriminatory”.
Source:
IslamOnline.net
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