HRW Slams Turkey Hijab Ruling
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      HRW said the court ruling forces Turkish women to choose between their 
faith and education. (Reuters)



ANKARA — Amid calls to curtail the powers of Turkey's Constitutional Court over 
its ruling annulling a constitutional reform bill easing ban on hijab in 
universities, Human Rights Watch on Saturday, June 7, denounced the verdict as 
a violation of religious freedom.
"This decision means that women who choose to wear a headscarf in Turkey will 
be forced to choose between their religion and education," Holly Cartner, 
Europe and Central Asia Director at HRW, said in a statement cited by Reuters.

"This is truly disappointing and does not bode well for the reform process."

The Constitutional Court, Turkey's highest court, on Thursday, June 5, annulled 
a constitutional reform bill easing restrictions on hijab on campus.

"The Constitutional Court decision is direct interference in parliament's 
legislative power," AK deputy chairman Dengir Mir Mehmet Firat told reporters 
after an emergency meeting chaired by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on 
Friday.

"This is an open violation of the principle of separation of powers."

The parliament passed last February a constitutional change allowing students 
to cover their heads only with traditional scarves tied loosely under the chin. 
Veils covering the neck remained banned.

The opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) petitioned the Court, whose 
verdicts can't be appealed, to scrap the amendment.

Many universities defied the law, refusing to allow students to don hijab, an 
obligatory code of dress in Islam.

Hijab has been banned in public buildings, universities, schools and government 
buildings in Muslim-majority Turkey since shortly after a 1980 military coup.

Violation

The court ruling also drew fire as a violation of the Turkish Constitution. 
"This decision has raised questions over the separation of powers," said 
parliament speaker Koksal Toptan.

"It has led to serious concern over the development of our democracy," added 
Toptan, who hails from the ruling AK party.

"The Constitutional Court made a decision about the contents of this law passed 
by 411 deputies of our parliament even though the constitution clearly states 
the court can only carry out procedural examinations."

The speaker suggested drafting a new constitution and establishing a senate in 
addition to a parliament to trim the powers of the Constitutional Court. "I 
believe it will be beneficial to debate a new constitution and the bicameral 
system," he said.

The Turkish parliament was bicameral under the 1961 constitution, but became 
unicameral again under the 1982 constitution, a legacy of a 1980 military coup. 
"Such a system will reduce the load on the Constitutional Court and allow it to 
work more comfortably," said Toptan.

"The burden of the Constitutional Court may ease in a two-chamber system."

The government has not commented on the senate proposal.

Turkish TV quoted the staunchly secularist, main opposition party CHP Chairman 
Deniz Baykal as rejecting such a move.

The CHP would not be able to block it on its own and it was not immediately 
clear how other parties would respond.

Related Links:

a.. Turkish Court Annuls Hijab Law
a.. Turkey's Delayed Hijab Dream
a.. Turkish Campuses Fail Hijab Test
a.. Turkey Secularists Protest Hijab Lift
a.. Turkey's Hijab Dilemma Intensifies
a.. Turkish Court Considers AKP Ban
a.. Why wear Hijab?
a.. Hijab Protects
a.. Hijab- Questions and Answers
a.. Liberation by the Veil
a.. Hijab: A lesson to be learned
a.. Only For Allah
a.. My Body is My Own Business
a.. The War of the Women
a.. Thinking about Hijab...some steps to consider?
a.. Some advice to a young sis who wants to wear hijab
a.. Veiled? One Muslim woman on her choice to veil
a.. Poem on hijab!

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