Skip to main content
The Morning Star Shop
Top EU court rules bosses can ban employees from wearing ‘religious symbols’ such as headscarves
Open Society Justice Initiative says ruling is discrimination masquerading as neutrality
A woman with a headscarf walks between other people on a street at the district Neukoelln in Berlin

THE European Union’s top court ruled today that bosses can, in limited circumstances, ban their employees from wearing “religious or political symbols,” such as Islamic headscarves.

In its ruling, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) said that EU member states’ courts should decide on whether the ban corresponds to a “genuine need” on the part of the employer, adding that they must also consider the rights of the employee and national legislation on the freedom of religion.

Maryam H’madoun of the Open Society Justice Initiative described the ruling as discrimination masquerading as neutrality.
 
“Laws, policies and practices prohibiting religious dress are targeted manifestations of Islamophobia that seek to exclude Muslim women from public life or render them invisible.
 
“A rule that expects every person to have the same outward appearance is not neutral. It deliberately discriminates against people because they are visibly religious.
 
“Courts across Europe and the UN human rights committee have emphasised that the wearing of a headscarf does not cause any form of harm that would give rise to a ‘genuine need’ by an employer to implement such practices.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Red Devils' logo
Men’s Rugby League / 12 August 2025
12 August 2025

Fan group The 1873 issues scathing response to owners’ statement saying the club will not close

People inspect the damage at the Sheikh Radwan al-Taba UNRWA clinic following an Israeli army bombardment in Gaza City, August 6, 2025
Gaza / 6 August 2025
6 August 2025

Israeli media awash with leaks and rumours of Netanyahu’s plans to seize Gaza. Meanwhile, the unrelenting siege of Gaza continues unabated 

Demonstrators carrying Palestinian flags look on as the Ship to Gaza boat 'Handala' arrives at the port of Malmö, Sweden, May 8, 2024
Middle East / 29 July 2025
29 July 2025

Mr Smalls and 13 other Freedom Flotilla Coalition activists who tried to break Israel’s illegal blockade of Gaza aboard the Handala ship remain in detention and on hunger strike

Similar stories
Features / 13 February 2025
13 February 2025
ESTHER, from Nordic Model Now! explains how decriminalisation of prostitution, rendering it just another form of ‘work’, would undermine the Equality Act 2010
Persecution of Jews during the Black Death, unknown artist
Holocaust Memorial Day 2025 / 27 January 2025
27 January 2025
JAMES CROSSLEY charts how anti Jewish sentiment developed from ancient days and the dawn of Christianity to the Middle Ages, the birth of Protestantism and the sinister era of of the Nazis