EU’s Top Court: Employers May Ban Islamic Headscarves
The Court of Justice of the European Union, the EU’s highest court, has ruled that private sector employers within the 27-member bloc are legally entitled to prohibit their employees from wearing Islamic headscarves at the workplace.
EU’s Top Court: Employers May Ban Islamic Headscarves
Soeren Kern | Gatestone Institute | July 21, 2021
The Court of Justice of the European Union, the EU’s highest court, has ruled that private sector employers within the 27-member bloc are legally entitled to prohibit their employees from wearing Islamic headscarves at the workplace.
The decision states that corporate bans on religious or political symbols are legitimate if employers wish to “present a neutral image towards customers” or to “prevent social disputes.”
The judgment is consistent with previous determinations by the Luxembourg-based court, informally known as the European Court of Justice (ECJ), that bans on religious symbols at the workplace are not inherently discriminatory — provided they apply equally to all religions.
The significance of the ECJ’s decision on the headscarf — arguably the most visible symbol of political Islam in Europe — cannot be overstated: by striking a balance between religious liberty and entrepreneurial freedom, the court has effectively blocked a back-door effort to enshrine Sharia law in European labor law.