Quebec moves to ban religious symbols including headscarves worn by school staff, students
Canadian Muslim group calls new bill ‘renewed attack on fundamental rights’

TRENTON, Canada
Canada’s largest Muslim organization is outraged over a bill introduced by the Quebec government that would ban headscarves for school support staff and students.
Bill 94 would cover not just teachers, as is now the case under the existing secularism law, but support staff, volunteers and students as well.
The ban, meant to separate state from religion, also outlaws Christian crosses Jewish kippahs and Sikh turbans.
“In Quebec, we made the decision that state and the religion are separate,” said Education Minister Bernard Drainville, CBC News reported. “And today we say the public schools are separate from religion.”
But the National Council of Canadian Muslims (NCCM), who are challenging in the Supreme Court the original bill that forbids religious symbols being worn by teachers, say the new bill is another infringement on their rights and unfairly targets hijab-wearing Muslims.
“This renewed attack on the fundamental rights of our community is just one of several recent actions taken by this historically unpopular government to bolster their poll numbers by attacking the rights of Muslim Canadians,” the NCCM said in a social media post. “This is the most important civil liberties battle in our lifetime.”
The new bill follows reports of problems involving contravention of the current secular bill at 17 Quebec schools.
Bill 94 also demands teachers undergo an annual review and says employees at French-language schools can only speak in French with students and staff. French is the official language in Quebec.