Uttar Pradesh: Girls denied entry to Moradabad college for wearing burqa

Earlier in January 2022, a similar situation rose in Karnataka when the massive Hijab protests broke out
Image for representational purpose only (Pic: TNIE)
Image for representational purpose only (Pic: TNIE)

Some students of the Hindu college in Uttar Pradesh's Moradabad were denied entry to the college for wearing a burqa despite the prescribed uniform code for the students.

The girls alleged that their college was not letting them enter the college campus wearing burqa and was compelling them to remove it at the entrance gate, as per an ANI report. 

On the said matter, a scuffle broke out between the students, the Samajwadi Chatra Sabha workers, and the college professors who remained adamant about sticking to the prescribed rules. A video of the scene from the Hindu college has been making rounds on the Internet.

Dress code for students

Meanwhile, college professor Dr AP Singh said that they have implemented a dress code for the students and anybody who refuses to follow it will be barred from entering the college campus. To this, the members of Samajwadi Chhatra Sabha submitted a memorandum to include the burqa in the dress code for college and allow the girls to attend their classes wearing it.

Earlier in January 2022, a similar situation rose in Karnataka when the massive Hijab protests broke out, as a few students of Government Girls PU college in the Udupi district of the state alleged that they had been barred from attending classes. During the protests, a few students claimed they were denied entry into the college for wearing hijab.

Following this incident, students of different colleges arrived at Shanteshwar Education Trust in Vijayapura wearing saffron stoles. The situation was the same in several colleges in the Udupi district.

The pre-University education board had released a circular stating that students can wear only the uniform approved by the school administration and no other religious practices will be allowed in colleges, as stated in the ANI report. 

The matter was then taken up to the Karnataka High Court which dismissed various petitions challenging a ban on hijab in education institutions and said that wearing a hijab is not an essential religious practice of Islam. However, when taken to the Supreme Court and the apex body, on October 13, 2022, pronounced a split verdict in the Karnataka hijab ban case.

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