Government of Austria bans headscarf for school girls

Government of Austria bans headscarf for school girls

The right-wing government in Austria today announced that girls attending day care centres and elementary schools should no longer be wearing headscar

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The right-wing government in Austria today announced that girls attending day care centres and elementary schools should no longer be wearing headscarves announcing a plan to draft a new bill.
“The veiling of small children should definitely have no place in our country,” conservative Chancellor Sebastian Kurz told reporters after a meeting. He said that the step will curb gender discrimination against girls and prevent the development of marginalized parallel societies within Austria.

“It’s important to take a stance against political Islam. We want to make sure that children grow up free and that they are not pulled into these [Islamic] mechanisms,” added Vice Chancellor Heinz-Christian Strache of the far-right Freedom Party.  Small girls with headscarves are not a large-scale phenomenon in Austria.

When asked for statistics that underpin the new policy, Kurz was not able to provide numbers but said that it is a growing problem. Half a year ago, a ban on face veils came into effect in Austria, a policy that likewise affects only a small number of people.  So far, police have cited only 50 transgressors. To pass the new headscarf ban for girls, the two right-wing government parties need the support of one opposition party in parliament, to secure a necessary two-thirds majority. Social Democrats and Liberals signalled Wednesday that would consider the bill, while calling for a package of integration policies rather than symbolic steps like a ban.