Published: 15:43, February 14, 2022 | Updated: 19:11, February 14, 2022
Indian state reopens some schools in wake of hijab dispute
By Reuters

Indian Muslim women shout slogans against banning Muslim girls wearing hijab from attending classes at some schools in the southern Indian state of Karnataka during a protest in Mumbai, India on Feb 13, 2022. (RAFIQ MAQBOOL / AP)

UDUPI, India - A state in southern India re-opened some schools on Monday that had been closed following protests last week over female students not being allowed to wear hijabs, or head-to-toe burqas, in class.

The issue, widely seen by India's Muslim minority community as a bid to sideline it by authorities in a Hindu-dominated nation, comes as Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the opposition parties prepare for elections in key states of Uttarakhand, Goa and Uttar Pradesh.

According to the Election Commission of India (ECI), the voting will be completed in a single phase in Uttarakhand and Goa. However, Uttar Pradesh will be witnessing the second phase of the seven-phase staggered elections.

Police stood guard as students in pink uniforms, about a dozen wearing hijabs, entered a government girl's school where the issue first flared in Karnataka state's district of Udipi, about 400 km from the tech hub of Bengaluru.

The move came after a state court, which has set a hearing of the matter for Monday, told students not to wear any religious clothing, ranging from saffron shawls to scarves or hijabs, in classrooms until further orders

Authorities have banned gatherings of more than five people within 200 meters of educational institutions in the area, which have begun classes from primary to high school, although higher grades and colleges are still shut.

The move came after a state court, which has set a hearing of the matter for Monday, told students not to wear any religious clothing, ranging from saffron shawls to scarves or hijabs, in classrooms until further orders.

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"Whether wearing of hijab in the classroom is a part of essential religious practice of Islam in the light of constitutional guarantees needs a deeper examination," the court said in an interim order last week.

The issue was spotlighted following protests last week after some schools refused entry to students wearing the garments, deemed to have fallen foul of a Feb 5 order on uniforms by the state, which is ruled by Modi's BJP. 

The party derives its support mainly from the majority Hindu community, which forms about 80 percent of India's population of roughly 1.4 billion, while Muslims account for about 13 percent.

Ayesha Imthiaz, a student in Udipi, said it was humiliating to be asked to take off the hijab before class.

She felt her "religion had been questioned and insulted by a place which I had considered as a temple of education," she told Reuters on the weekend.

An official in the coastal district of Udipi, Pradeep Kurudekar S, told reporters authorities would wait for further orders from the court or the government to resume all classes.

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The issue prompted expressions of support for Muslim girls and women from the US government and Nobel Peace laureate Malala Yousafzai.