J&K Students Association writes to CM over hijab ban on Kashmiri students
Students who wear the hijab or burkha, have reportedly been barred from attending classes and threatened with expulsion by the management of Sri Soubhagya Lalitha College of Nursing.
ANI
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Representative image
Srinagar, 15 July
The Jammu and Kashmir Students Association
(JKSA) on Tuesday wrote to State Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, seeking his
immediate intervention in an incident of alleged religious discrimination faced
by Kashmiri female students wearing a hijab at a nursing college in Bengaluru.
Students who wear the hijab or burkha, have
reportedly been barred from attending classes and threatened with expulsion by
the management of Sri Soubhagya Lalitha College of Nursing, affiliated with the
Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences (RGUHS).
In its letter, the Association expressed
deep anguish over the harassment and humiliation allegedly inflicted upon the
students, who were denied entry into classrooms and practical sessions for the
past several days.
"These Kashmiri female students have
been systematically targeted, humiliated, and denied their fundamental right to
education solely because they choose to wear the burkha or abaya, an expression
of modesty, dignity, and identity rooted deeply in their religious and personal
beliefs," the letter stated.
National Convenor of the Association, Nasir
Khuehami, said that the college Chairman stormed into a classroom and ordered
hijab-wearing students to leave immediately. When the students asked for
clarification based on this directive, they were reportedly told, "This is
our college; only our rules apply."
The chairman and principal allegedly
threatened to terminate the students and withhold their academic records if
they continued to wear their religious attire. The students were warned that
they would not be permitted inside the college unless they removed their
hijabs, despite no official or legal policy existing to support such a ban.
Calling it "absurd, Islamophobic
stereotypes," Khuehami condemned the use of such discriminatory practices
and language, noting that this is a "direct and dangerous violation of the
fundamental rights guaranteed by the Constitution."
The Association demanded that the Chief Minister take swift and decisive action. "These young women must be allowed to resume their education without any coercion to compromise their religious beliefs.
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