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The Nuclear Card

Amnesty International finds bias against European Muslims

Posted on 24 April 2012 by Amago

Anti-Muslim banners protesting against the establishment of a Muslim prayer room, in Catalonia, Spain

Anti-Muslim banners protesting against the establishment of a Muslim prayer room, in Catalonia, Spain

(h/t: mjasghar)

Amnesty International finds bias against European Muslims

(BBC via. Islamophobia Today)

European governments must do more to challenge the negative stereotypes and prejudices against Muslims fuelling discrimination especially in education and employment, a new report by Amnesty International reveals today.

“Muslim women are being denied jobs and girls prevented from attending regular classes just because they wear traditional forms of dress, such as the headscarf. Men can be dismissed for wearing beards associated with Islam,” said Marco Perolini, Amnesty International’s expert on discrimination.

“Rather than countering these prejudices, political parties and public officials are all too often pandering to them in their quest for votes.”

The report Choice and prejudice: discrimination against Muslims in Europe, exposes the impact of discrimination on the ground of religion or belief on Muslims in several aspects of their lives, including employment and education.

It focuses on Belgium, France, the Netherlands, Spain, and Switzerland where Amnesty International has already raised issues such as restrictions on the establishment of places of worship and prohibitions on full-face veils. The report documents numerous individual cases of discrimination across the countries covered.

“Wearing religious and cultural symbols and dress is part of the right of freedom of expression. It is part of the right to freedom of religion or belief – and these rights must be enjoyed by all faiths equally.” said Marco Perolini.

“While everyone has the right to express their cultural, traditional or religious background by wearing a specific form of dress no one should be pressurized or coerced to do so.  General bans on particular forms of dress that violate the rights of those freely choosing to dress in a particular way are not the way to do this.”

The report highlights that legislation prohibiting discrimination in employment has not been appropriately implemented in Belgium, France and the Netherlands. Employers have been allowed to discriminate on the grounds that religious or cultural symbols will jar with clients or colleagues or that a clash exists with a company’s corporate image or its ‘neutrality’.

This is in direct conflict with European Union (EU) anti-discrimination legislation which allows variations of treatment in employment only if specifically required by the nature of the occupation.

“EU legislation prohibiting discrimination on the ground of religion or belief in the area of employment seems to be toothless across Europe, as we observe a higher rate of unemployment among Muslims, and especially Muslim women of foreign origin,” said Marco Perolini.

In the last decade, pupils have been forbidden to wear the headscarf or other religious and traditional dress at school in many countries including Spain, France, Belgium, Switzerland and the Netherlands.

“Any restriction on the wearing of religious and cultural symbols and dress in schools must be based on assessment of the needs in each individual case. General bans risk adversely Muslims girls’ access to education and violating their rights to freedom of expression and to manifest their beliefs.” Marco Perolini said.

The right to establish places of worship is a key component of the right to freedom of religion or belief which is being restricted in some European countries, despite state obligations to protect, respect and fulfil this right.

Since 2010, the Swiss Constitution has specifically targeted Muslims with the prohibition of the construction of minarets, embedding anti-Islam stereotypes and violating international obligations that Switzerland is bound to respect.

In Catalonia (Spain), Muslims have to pray in outdoor spaces because existing prayer rooms are too small to accommodate all the worshippers and requests to build mosques are being disputed as incompatible with the respect of Catalan traditions and culture. This goes against freedom of religion which includes the right to worship collectively in adequate places.

“There is a groundswell of opinion in many European countries that Islam is alright and Muslims are ok so long as they are not too visible. This attitude is generating human rights violations and needs to be challenged,” said Marco Perolini.

  • Stoned Gremlin

    @Stuart Parsons Might I recommend you stop getting your information about Islam from the prophet of doom website?

  • http://Aayjay.wordpress.com AJ

    @Stuart,

    I was not appalled the least bit!

  • Stuart Parsons

    Might I recommend that everyone reads the Quran and Sunnah and the Sirat Rasul Allah. I guarantee all reasonable persons will be absolutely appalled by what these primary Islamic sources reveal about the so-called Religion of Peace.

  • Sir David ( Illuminati membership number 16.69

    John
    Many democracies get things wrong . Remember Hitler was elected by the german people . So your point is about majority consensus?

    “Other religions have reformed for a large part”
    The concept of reform is a relative or value judgement . I would suggest that Islam like other religions has changed over the years . Your ignorance about this is not the fault of anyone here but yourself.

  • John

    @Danios:

    That doesn’t change the fact that it is being done by majority consensus. This is how it is really like in a real Islamic society. Surley thousands of Mullahs can’t be wrong at once?

    It’s all well and good to sit in cozy west and condemned it but try doing it in one of those Muslim countries and see how much support you get or indeed how long you get to live.

    Where is your condemnation of those Islamic scholars and that religious ideology that perpetrate those crimes btw?

    “But hey, if you want to use it as an excuse to be a bastard then go for it, just don’t expect me to take your comments seriously.”

    Bit of an argument failure on your part? Happens when trying to pretend it’s a religion of peace but it doesn’t stick even for a moment.

    “Besides it not like all the other major religions of the would have a clean slate, when it comes to human rights violations being done in their name.”

    Other religions have reformed for a large part…do you see any reform coming forth here? Mostly its denial and always ‘someone else’s fault’ that you get to see.

  • http://www.youtube.com/user/GargamelGold?feature=mhee CriticalDragon1177

    @John

    You think that just because Danios and the other people behind Loon Watch have devoted their entire blog to debunking anti Muslim bigotry, that they would support or even condone evil done by Muslims in the name of Islam?

    Besides it not like all the other major religions of the would have a clean slate, when it comes to human rights violations being done in their name.

  • http://thepenofawanderingstranger.com/personal/ Jack Cope

    John, are you saying that Europe should emulate Pakistan? That just because some developing country does it that its OK that the so called ‘civilized’ world behaves in the same way?

    And as Danios and others say, that issue is wrong, people have spoken out against it and again, its wrong. But hey, if you want to use it as an excuse to be a bastard then go for it, just don’t expect me to take your comments seriously.

  • Danios

    @ John:

    I have spoken out numerous times on that issue. The persecution of Ahmadis in Pakistan is a tragedy.

  • John

    “This so pathetic, why deny someone the right to worship as they please??”

    Good question, ask Pakistanis too.

    Any person of the Quadiani group or the Lahori group (who call themselves ‘Ahmadis’ or by any other name), who directly or indirectly, poses himself as a Muslim, or calls, or refers to, his faith as Islam, or preaches or propagates his faith, or invites others to accept his faith, by words, either spoken or written, or by visible representations, or in any manner whatsoever outrages the religious feelings of Muslims shall be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to three years and shall also be liable to fine.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ordinance_XX

    But hang on Pakistanis are Muslims so they can do whatever they like that its fine.

    It’s hard its take Islamist rhetoric seriously when reality is so much different.

  • Sir David : Man on a phone with a french spell check

    I remember seeing many pictures from the north east of england where the women habitually wore scarves Ireland too in living memory

  • mjasghar

    the catalan thing is weird.
    catalans go on about their heritage being attacked by the rest of Spain,
    the kind of attitude that often conceals one’s own perjudices.
    There was a little mosque episode (back when carl riotta was still in it and so it was good) where they banned the veil and it got overturned because of a past act that allowed it for catholic girls and their communion.
    The fact is mainland european countries have a history of selective implementing these lwas.
    So many French schools still have crucifixes whilst not allowing nonchristian clothing or even the sikh bangle. You can be sure if they banned the headscarf the cops there would ignore nuns or any white women.

  • Reynardine

    I can understand requiring someone to be recognizable if they enter a bank, an airport, a government building, or the like. The rest of this is whack out of line.

    Kerchiefs or scarfs around the head have been worn by East European peasants, women attending catholic services, and both women and men engages in harvest, roundup, or heavy cleanup operations. Chicago women often prefer them as winter headgear, unless they want to get exercise chasing their hats down the street. In cold weather, quite a few people wear balaclavas, especially for skiing or outdoor ice skating. Women with fresh dye jobs often wear them to preserve hair color. It’s clear that forbidding such head coverings to Muslim women alone is a nasty piece of discrimination, and forbidding a reading room is sheer spite.

  • http://www.wmonline.com BuddhaShrink

    I agree! Worship is good and should be encouraged.

  • mindy1

    This so pathetic, why deny someone the right to worship as they please??

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