Tuesday, 05 September 2006

MUSLIMS CALL TO AN END TO AZERBAIJAN HEADSCARF BAN

Published in News Digest

By empty (9/5/2006 issue of the CACI Analyst)

Religious activists in predominantly Shiite Muslim Azerbaijan on Monday called for officials to change rules barring headscarves in ID photos, saying the law violated observant women\'s civil rights. Women who refuse to remove their headscarves for passport and other identification photos have unequal access to everything from jobs and health care to travel and their right to vote, members of the Centre for the Protection of Freedom of Conscience and Religion said at a gathering in Baku. \"In reality their rights are limited though the constitution and number of international documents give them the right to cover their heads,\" the centre said in a statement read at the meeting.
Religious activists in predominantly Shiite Muslim Azerbaijan on Monday called for officials to change rules barring headscarves in ID photos, saying the law violated observant women\'s civil rights. Women who refuse to remove their headscarves for passport and other identification photos have unequal access to everything from jobs and health care to travel and their right to vote, members of the Centre for the Protection of Freedom of Conscience and Religion said at a gathering in Baku. \"In reality their rights are limited though the constitution and number of international documents give them the right to cover their heads,\" the centre said in a statement read at the meeting. Ilgar Ibrahimoglu, a banned opposition cleric with a sizeable following in Azerbaijan, urged the secular state\'s head of the committee for relations with religious groups, Hidayat Orujov, \"to address the issue quickly.\" \"For nine years thousands of observant women have been barred of most of their rights,\" Ibrahimoglu said. Some of the 30 women wearing the Hijab, or religious headscarf, at the meeting said many of them could not receive identification documents needed in daily affairs because of the rules and that they continued to use Soviet-era documents that were no longer valid. One woman, who gave her name only as Jefer, told ÀFÐ she was not able to register her marriage or receive a birth certificate for her son because she lacked proper identification. (AFP)
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