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Prokop came
under harsh criticism from different sections of society.
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By Ahmed Al-Matboli,
IOL Correspondent
VIENNA, March 9, 2005
(IslamOnline.net) – In what some fear could be a curtain raiser
for a major policy shift in a country considered somehow tolerant,
Austrian Interior Minister Liese Prokop has called for banning
hijab-clad Muslim women from teaching at schools.
“I consider now the legality of
banning hijab in schools,” Prokop told the state-run Falter
Magazine Tuesday, March 8. “But, anyhow, I will throw my weight
about the ban.”
She argued that wearing the hijab in
schools runs counter to the values of Austrian society.
“Muslim women suffer from oppression
and their rights are down-trodden,” the minister claimed, urging
for stopping what she called “forcible marriage” and “honor
killing” spreading among Muslims.
Islam roundly abhors the primordial honor killing
practices as it holds every soul in high esteem and does not allow
any transgression upon it.
Likewise, Islam granted women full
rights to accept or reject whoever proposes to her.
Women’s consent is vital for a valid marriage contract
under Islam.
A female Muslim delegation met
senior Austrian officials last year, stressing that Islam
enshrined inalienable rights for women and cleared stereotypes
circulated by right-wing media.
Muslims Furious
Expectedly, the minister’s
statements raised the ire of the Muslim minority and Austrian
politicians as well.
“It is strange that such provocative
and offensive statements coincide with the International Women’s
Day,” Anas Schakfeh, chairman of Islamic Religious Authority,
formally protested in a letter to the People’s Party (OVP), which
dominates the coalition government.
“It is unusual for the People’s
Party and other parties in Austria to descend to this repugnant
rhetoric,” he added, calling for an immediate action from the
government.
Austrian Christians have
demonstrated their solidarity with the Muslim minority and
supported Muslim women’s right to take on the hijab.
“Will this minister call for banning
the cross as well?” wondered Richard Schadauer, head of the
Christian Socialist and Democratic Association (ACUS).
He further distanced Christianity
from Prokop’s statements.
“Catholic Prokop has nothing to do
with Christianity,” he said.
Gov’t Criticism
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Chancellor
Wolfgang Schussel said Prokop is in no position to address the
hijab issue.
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Weighing in, Chancellor Wolfgang
Schussel, said the interior minister is in no position to address
such an issue, which falls under the minister of education.
An official source at the office of
the minister of education tried to reassure the Muslim minority,
saying that Austria has no problem with the Muslim dress code.
The spokeswoman for the Greens
Party’s women’s affairs, Brigid Weinzinger, dismissed Prokop’s
statements as “insulting.”
“She leaves the impression that
domestic violence is only confined to Muslims as if it doesn’t
exist in Austria,” she said.
Muslims make up some 8 per cent of
the country’s eight million population.
Islam, which was officially
acknowledged in Austria in 1908, is considered the second religion
in the country after Catholic Christianity.
A law issued in 1867, which
guaranteed respect for all religions, gave Muslims the right to
establish mosques and practice their religion in Austria.
However, Muslim rights in the
country were enhanced by the signing of the Saint-Germain
agreement in 1919, in which the Austrian government pledged its
protection for minorities and affirmed the right of each citizen
to assume important national posts regardless of his/her religious
or ethnic backgrounds.
The International Helsinki
Federation for Human Rights (IHF) said in a report released
Monday, March 7, that the debate surrounding the adoption in 2004
of a French law prohibiting religious attire in public schools
helped encourage intolerance and discrimination against hijab-clad
Muslim women across Europe.
Source:
IslamOnline.net