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Religion

Austria to ban hijab for young schoolkids

April 4, 2018

The right-wing government wants to ban girls in kindergarten and primary schools from wearing headscarves. It's unclear how many children will be affected as most Muslim girls only start wearing the hijab from puberty.

A girl wearing a headscarf in class
Image: Imago/photothek/L. Johannsen

Austria's right-wing government said on Wednesday it would seek to prohibit girls from wearing headscarves in nurseries and elementary schools.

The Austria Press Agency reported that Chancellor Sebastian Kurz's center-right coalition hopes to draw up its "child protection law" by the summer.

"The veiling of small children should definitely have no place in our country," Kurz told reporters after a cabinet meeting.

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Aimed at pre-teen girls

He told ORF radio that the legislation would apply to girls of up to the age of 10 or 11 years.

"Our goal is to confront any development of parallel societies in Austria," Kurz told ORF, using a term he and the far-right Freedom Party (FPO), the coalition partner, favor to describe what they see as a threat posed by some Muslims to mainstream culture.

Read more: Austria's public broadcaster sues far-right vice chancellor over 'fake news' post

Kurz, at a news conference with Vice Chancellor Heinz-Christian Strache of the FPO, said they believed there was a problem in schools although they produced no figures to support this.

"What I can tell you is that it is a growing phenomenon. A few decades ago we did not have this in Austria and now it occurs primarily in Islamic kindergartens, but also here and there in public establishments of Vienna and other cities," Kurz said.

Read more: Germany's AfD wants ban on wearing a headscarf in street

Muslim leaders say communities feel victimized

Both leaders didn't say how many children might be affected. Headscarves are rarely worn by Muslim girls before they reach puberty, the country's main Muslim organization said, adding that this type of legislation would unsettle Muslim communities.

"Devout and secular Muslims are growing deeply anxious and worried that current politics stoke, rather than ease, resentment about changes in our society, by painting Islam as the enemy," it said in a statement.

The organization questioned why a ban on Christian children wearing crosses or Jewish boys wearing kippahs is not being discussed.

For any ban to come into effect, the government would need a two-thirds majority in parliament, requiring the support of two other smaller parties.

Read more: Vienna museum cancels migrant 'propaganda' play

Austria leans right

After taking in more than a hundred thousand asylum seekers during Europe's migration crisis in 2015/6, Kurz's conservatives won the largest seats in parliament following last October's election after taking a hard line on immigration. He and coalition partners the FPO have talked of a need to crack down on radical Islam.

Last year, the previous Austrian administration banned full-face veils in courts, schools and other "public places," and banned police officers, judges, magistrates and public prosecutors from wearing headscarves.

A plan to prohibit teachers from wearing headscarves was dropped.

mm/jm (dpa, AFP)

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