MP Balje starts the cause for the liberation of women wearing headscarves: Change Your Guidance

Kosovo Assembly MP Duda and the surname Balje has set up a very just and important cause. It has requested that administrative instruction be changed to the Ministry of Education, Science, Technology and innovation that prohibit the wear of headscarves in school spaces. “It's pathetic and against all rules, [...]
It has requested that administrative instruction be changed to the Ministry of Education, Science, Technology and innovation that prohibit the wear of headscarves in school spaces.
The “is unfortunate and against all rules, asking girls to make a choice between their religion and their role in society or educational institutions. This is exactly the opposite of how society and state should function. Ball, I follow Periscope.
There had also been complaints about this administrative instruction from our religious institutions and various chimneys.
Full report:
Change August administrative direction 06/2014
The obligation to wear the headscarf, as well as the ban on wearing the headscarf “I deprive Muslim women of the right to decide for themselves”.
It is therefore forbidden to command head coverings, but it is also forbidden to command a girl or a woman not to cover her head.
This is the philosophical aspect of Islam, under which all decisions in religion must be a product of free will.
It's just because of all of this, and in terms of constitutional and legal rights in the country, it's important to know how to make a difference between absolute “and limited”
“Absolute right” is a right that the state cannot legally limit: for example, the right to life; freedom of thought, freedom of faith and religion.
“The right/freedom limit” is a right that the state can limit.
Freedom of expression of faith is limited freedom, and that freedom is limited to LIG.
WHAT IS THE MAKE OF THE DIFFECTS IT IS SEA, there is no law in Kosovo restricting the freedom of Muslim girls and women to express their faith through modest dress, wearing the headscarf.
The state, therefore, can apply to restricting rights and freedoms only with the LIG, provided there is a legitimate “objective of limiting” and that restrictive “measures are proportional”.
So the main problem we face in Kosovo is that limiting the freedom of girls to wear the headscarf in public schools is based on sub-administrational (administration Guide) and not on the Law, and this without question testifies to an arbitrary, illegal and unconstitutional restriction.
As for the uppers, I find that Article 3, the 13th point of the August 06/2014 Administrative Guide is illegal and unconstitutional,
MANT, overcoming its competencies, has taken over some of the functions of legislative power (KOW), granting itself the right to, by law, with administrative guidelines, limit constitutional rights and freedoms, respectively.
Let me repeat again that this is contrary to Article 38 par. 4. of the Constitution of the Republic of Kosovo and contrary to Article 9 par. 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights that human rights and freedoms can be limited to the Law!
It is unfortunate and against all rules, to ask girls to make a choice between their religion and their role in society or educational institutions. This is exactly the opposite of how society and state should function.
The state does not violate its obligation to religious neutrality, if it permits wearing a headscarf.
School is, not a sterile clinical space, but a mirror of society and a place where man learns about it.












