Kuwait MPs can shun hijab

Author: 
Agence France Presse
Publication Date: 
Thu, 2009-10-29 03:00

KUWAIT CITY: Kuwait’s constitutional court on Wednesday rejected an action brought by four voters to declare invalid the election of two women MPs because they refuse to wear the headscarf.

The decision of the court, whose rulings are final, was announced to reporters by the chairman of the court, Yussef Ghanam Al-Rashid.

Two of the four women who became Kuwait’s first female MPs in May refuse to wear the hijab, which has also been spurned by the only woman appointed as a minister in the Kuwaiti government following the May election.

The four voters said the two MPs had flouted a clause in an election law stipulating that women voters and candidates must comply with Islamic regulations, including wearing the hijab.

Explaining its decision in a written verdict, the court said the election law fails to specify the type of regulations women must adhere to or whether that included wearing the hijab.

It also pointed out that the Kuwaiti constitution, which is higher than any law, guarantees personal freedom and freedom of faith and does not discriminate between people over their religion or sex.

The emirate’s fatwa department, which issues religious edicts, ruled in early October that Muslim women must wear the hijab in line with Islamic law.

Islamist MPs are demanding the authorities enforce the fatwa, but their liberal colleagues say it is non-binding, insisting the rule of law and the constitution should be the only points of reference.

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