Karnataka Hijab Ban: Supreme Court Hearing DAY-4 -LIVE UPDATES

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12 Sep 2022 7:37 AM GMT

  • Karnataka Hijab Ban: Supreme Court Hearing DAY-4 -LIVE UPDATES

    Supreme Court bench comprising Justices Hemant Gupta and Sudhanshu Dhulia will hear a batch of petitions challenging the ban on wearing Hijab in educational institutions in Karnataka.A batch of 23 petitions is listed before the bench. Some of them are writ petitions filed directly before the Supreme Court seeking the right to wear hijab for Muslim girl students. Some others are special...

    Supreme Court bench comprising Justices Hemant Gupta and Sudhanshu Dhulia will hear a batch of petitions challenging the ban on wearing Hijab in educational institutions in Karnataka.

    A batch of 23 petitions is listed before the bench. Some of them are writ petitions filed directly before the Supreme Court seeking the right to wear hijab for Muslim girl students. Some others are special leave petitions which challenge the judgment of the Karnataka High Court dated March 15 which upheld the hijab ban.

    So far, the bench has heard Senior Advocate Devadatt Kamat for the petitioners who argued that the Government Order, banning Hijabs in educational institutions violates students' fundamental rights under Article 19, 21 and 25 of the Constitution.

    During the course of hearing, the bench has also raised several queries like whether religious clothing can be worn in a government run institution in a secular country. The bench also asked the counsels whether if it is held that freedom of expression includes the freedom to dress, would it also include the freedom to undress?

    The SLPs has been filed against the judgment dated March 15 passed by the High Court of Karnataka, upholding Government Order dated 05.02.2022, which has effectively prohibited Petitioners, and other such female Muslim students from wearing the headscarf in their Pre-University Colleges. A Full Bench of the High Court comprising Chief Justice Ritu Raj Awasthi, Justice Krishna Dixit and Justice JM Khazi held that wearing of hijab by women was not an essential religious practice of Islam. The Bench further held the prescription of uniform dress code in educational institutions was not violative of the fundamental rights of the petitioners.

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    • 12 Sep 2022 9:55 AM GMT

      Justice Gupta : You like us to interpret these verses as Mr.Mucchala said Court should not.

      Khurshid : Your lordships have developed certain judicial techniques, Mucchala is on a slightly different view.

    • 12 Sep 2022 9:54 AM GMT

      Khurshid hands over copies of Quran to the judges.

    • 12 Sep 2022 9:54 AM GMT

      Khurshid : What the Prophet did is just as binding as the word of Quran. So the binary of obligatory and non-obligatory is not there in Islam.

    • 12 Sep 2022 9:53 AM GMT

      Khurshid : Unlike other religions, Islam has no binary of obligatory and non-obligatory. The word of God is obligatory.

    • 12 Sep 2022 9:53 AM GMT

      Khurshid : Revelations in Quran are not man-made, they are the word of God, which came through the Prophet. It is the word of God and it is mandatory.

    • 12 Sep 2022 9:51 AM GMT

      Senior Advocate Salman Khurshid starts arguments.

    • 12 Sep 2022 9:51 AM GMT

      Mucchala : Last point on reasonable accommodation.

      J Gupta : Mr Kamat has argued for one and a half day.

      Mucchala : Very well.

      Mucchala concludes.

    • 12 Sep 2022 9:50 AM GMT

      Mucchala : Some of the petitioners put the question before the Court. At that very moment, the Court should have said hands off, that we cannot decide whether it was essential religious practice or not.

    • 12 Sep 2022 9:46 AM GMT

      Muchhala : It is whether essential of religion or essential to religion, subsequently it became essential to religion and went up to Sabarimala case.

    • 12 Sep 2022 9:45 AM GMT

      Mucchala : The issue which is to be seen is whether it is essentially religious or essential to religion.

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