Neutral Citation Number: [2005] EWCA Civ 199
Case No: C1/2004/1394
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
BENNETT J
[2004] EWHC 1389 (Admin)
Royal Courts of Justice
Strand,
London,
WC2A 2LL
Date: 2 March 2005
Before :
LORD JUSTICE BROOKE
Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division)
LORD JUSTICE MUMMERY
and
LORD JUSTICE SCOTT BAKER
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Between :
The Queen on the application of SB
Claimant/
Appellant
- and -
Headteacher and Governors of Denbigh High School
Defendants/
Respondents
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Cherie Booth QC, Carolyn Hamilton and Eleni Mitrophanous (instructed
by the Children?s Legal Centre) for the Appellant
Simon A Birks (instructed by Head of Legal Services, Luton BC)
for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 20th-21st December 2004
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Approved Judgment
Lord Justice Brooke:
This is an appeal by SB against an order made by Bennett J in
the Administrative Court on 1st June 2004 whereby he dismissed
her application for judicial review of a decision of the Headteacher
and Governors of Denbigh High School, Luton ("the School"),
who had refused to allow her to attend the School if she was not
willing to comply with their school uniform requirements. The
same judge refused to grant her permission to apply for judicial
review of the local education authority?s actions in the matter,
and she has not been granted permission to appeal against that
refusal.
The School is a mixed community school for children between the
ages of 11 and 16. Children at the school speak 40 different languages,
and 21 different ethnic groups (and 10 different religious groups)
are represented in the school population. In 1993 90% of the pupils
were Muslim, but since that time the school?s intake has become
more diverse. 79% of the pupils now classify themselves as Muslim.
About 71% are of Pakistani or Bangladeshi heritage.
The Headteacher, Yasmin Bevan, was born into a Bengali Muslim
family. She grew up in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh before coming
to this country. She has had a great deal of involvement with
Bengali Muslim communities in this country and abroad, and she
says that she understands the Islamic dress code and the practices
adopted by Muslim women. She does not, however, purport to have
a detailed knowledge of the theological issues which surfaced
in this dispute.
She qualified as a teacher in 1977, and became headteacher at
the school in 1991. In those days its performance was well below
the national average, and it was viewed negatively by the local
community. Its performance is now well above average for schools
with a similar intake, and it cannot accommodate all the pupils
who wish to attend it. It has ranked tenth in the country for
adding value to its pupils? prior attainment. It has won school
achievement awards from the Department for Education and Science
(DfES), and it featured in a video on ethnic minority achievement
which the department produced.
For many years the School has taught pupils from a wide variety
of ethnic origins, cultural backgrounds and religious factions.
The School?s policy has been to accommodate everyone so far as
it reasonably can, whilst providing a suitable environment in
which children may learn and live together in harmony. The headteacher
believes that a school uniform forms an integral part of the school?s
drive for high standards and continuous improvement. In her view
a clear school uniform policy promotes a positive ethos and sense
of community identity, and ensures that students are dressed in
a way that is safe, practical and appropriate for learning. It
also prevents them from feeling disadvantaged because they cannot
afford the latest designer items, and makes them less vulnerable
to being teased because they are wearing the wrong clothes.
This case is concerned with the School?s uniform requirements
for girls. No real issue arises over the requirements for the
school jumper (navy blue v-neck jumper with school logo), shirt
(plain white cotton/polyester shirt, short or long sleeve with
collar), tie, socks and shoes. Girls may wear a skirt, trousers
or a shalwar kameeze, and there are specifications for each. For
the shalwar kameeze the specification reads:
"Shalwar: tapered at the ankles, not baggy.
Kameeze: between knee and mid-calf length, not gathered or flared.
Fabric must be cotton or poplin, not shiny, silky or crinkly."
The uniform requirements are accompanied by a sketch of the front
and back views of a girl wearing a shalwar kameeze, with appropriate
commentary. The kameeze is a sleeveless smock-like dress with
a square neckline, so that the girl?s collar and tie are visible.
The shalwar consists of loose trousers which taper at the ankles.
Except in hot weather the girls wear their school jumper under
the kameeze.
Girls are also permitted to wear headscarves so long as they
comply with three specific requirements. They must be lightweight
and navy blue, and worn so that the collar and tie can be seen.
They must also cover the head, be folded under the chin and taken
round to the back of the neck, with their ends tucked in in conformance
with health and safety requirements.
The claimant contends that for a Muslim woman who has started
to menstruate the shalwar kameeze does not comply with the strict
requirements of her religion. She insists that she should be allowed
to wear the jilbab, which is a form of dress worn by Muslim women
which effectively conceals the shape of their arms and legs. Very
strong religious beliefs are close to the centre of this dispute.
For the purposes of this judgment I will adopt the spelling of
the words "kameeze" and "jilbab" that was
used by the parties to this litigation.
The shalwar kameeze had featured in the school uniform policies
prior to 1993, but in that year a Working Party report led to
changes being made to details of the school uniform, and permission
being given to girls to wear headscarves for the first time.
The shalwar kameeze was seen as satisfying the religious requirement
that Muslim girls should wear modest dress, and girls from different
faith groups, such as Hindus and Sikhs, also wear it. Parents,
staff and students were all consulted over the new design, and
there was also consultation with the local mosques. The design
had to take into account not only religious considerations, such
as the need for modesty, but also health and safety considerations,
and it had to be suitable for all school activities.
The School?s uniform policy has always had the support of the
School?s governing body. A quarter of the present governors have
held that office since at least 1991. Four of the six parent governors
are Muslim, as are three of the governors appointed by the local
education authority. One of the community governors chairs the
Luton Council of Mosques. In March 2004, shortly before the judge
heard this case, the governors reaffirmed their unanimous support
for the uniform policy.
The claimant?s family came to England from Bangladesh. She has
two older sisters and two older brothers. She was born in this
country in September 1988. Her father died in 1992, and through
most of the history of the dispute she was living at home with
her mother (who did not speak English) and one sister and one
brother: the others had moved out. Her mother died in 2004. One
of her brothers is acting as her litigation friend in these proceedings.
She first attended the School in September 2000, and during her
first two years there she wore the shalwar kameeze without complaint.
As she grew older, however, she took an increasing interest in
her religion, and she formed the view that the shalwar kameeze
was not an acceptable form of dress for mature Muslim women in
public places. In her brother?s view the shalwar kameeze originated
as a Pakistani cultural dress without any particular religious
foundation, and she believed that the Islamic Shari?a required
women over the age of 13 to cover their bodies completely, apart
from their face and hands. The shalwar kameeze was not acceptable,
because the white shirt (which at the School is covered by a jumper
except in hot weather) revealed too much of the arms, and the
skirt length (which at the School may extend to the mid-calf)
should go down to the ankles.
At the start of the new school year in September 2002 she attended
the School dressed in a jilbab. She was accompanied by her brother
and another young man. They saw the assistant headteacher, Mr
Moore, who told her to go away and change into proper school uniform.
He felt that the young men were being unreasonable and threatening.
The three then went away, with the young men saying that they
were not prepared to compromise on this issue.
In his careful judgment ([2004] EWHC 1389 (Admin)) the judge
set out in great detail the subsequent history of events. Sadly,
the parties rapidly reached an impasse, with the claimant refusing
to attend school unless she was allowed to wear the jilbab, and
the School refusing to allow her to attend unless she was wearing
the shalwar kameeze. What was sadder still was that the attempts
to provide her with some form of education while the impasse lasted
did not bear any very fruitful results, and she lost the better
part of two years? schooling. In September 2004, following the
hearing before the judge, she was accepted by a different local
school which permitted her to wear the jilbab.
If the claimant succeeded in her claim that her rights under
Article 9 of the European Convention on Human Rights ("ECHR")
were violated, a court would have had to hear contested evidence
in relation to her claim for damages about the reasons why she
did not avail herself of the educational opportunities the School
maintained that it made available to her. It would have had to
decide whether an award of damages was appropriate, and if so,
the amount. We were told after the hearing of the appeal, however,
that she does not wish to pursue that claim. We are therefore
concerned only with her application for a declaration. This raises
three questions:
Was the claimant excluded from the school?
If "Yes", was it because her rights under ECHR Article
9(1) were being limited?
If "yes", were they being justifiably limited pursuant
to Article 9(2)?
(I should note here that she also claims that her right to education
under Article 2 of the First Protocol to the ECHR was violated
in the course of this dispute).
The judge?s answers to these three questions were:
i)No
ii) No (on the premise that the first answer had been "Yes").
iii)Yes (on the premise that the first two answers had been "Yes").
In recent years the topic of exclusion from a school has been
the subject of a good deal of attention both in Acts of Parliament
and departmental guidance. In this context "exclusion"
means "exclusion on disciplinary grounds" (see section
64(4) of the Schools Standards and Framework Act 1998 ("the
1998 Act") and section 52(10) of the Education Act 2002 ("the
2002 Act"). A headteacher may exclude a pupil from the school
for a fixed period or permanently, and in the former case, any
fixed periods of exclusion may not exceed more than 45 school
days in any one school year (1998 Act. s 64(1) and (2); 2002 Act
s 52 (1)). A pupil may not be excluded from a maintained school
(whether by suspension, expulsion or otherwise) except by the
headteacher in accordance with s 64 of the 1998 Act. Statute provides
for rights to make representations, and for rights of appeal in
the event of an exclusion.
DfES Circular 10/99 gives special guidance to schools in relation
to exclusions. It included the following statements:
"6.4Exclusion should not be used for breaching school uniform.
6.5The law allows head teachers to exclude a pupil for up to
45 days in a school year. However, individual exclusions of more
than a day or two make it more difficult for the pupil to reintegrate
into the school.
6.8The Government is committed to ensuring that by 2002 all pupils
excluded for more than 15 school days at a time receive full-time
and appropriate education whilst excluded."
DfES Guidance 0087/2003 states:
"22.If the head teacher is satisfied that, on the balance
of probabilities, a pupil has committed a disciplinary offence
and the pupil is being removed from the school site for that reason,
formal exclusion is the only legal method of removal. Informal
and unofficial exclusions are illegal regardless of whether they
are done with the agreement of parents or carers.
21.Exclusion should not be used for:
(c) breaches of school uniform rules, except where these are
persistent and in open defiance of such rules."
As soon as a pupil has been excluded for more than 15 days, the
local education authority is responsible for ensuring that he/she
receives suitable full-time education (DfES Circular 11/99 para
5.1).
Departmental guidance on school uniform (DfES circular 0264/2002)
contains advice at a high level of generality which was superfluous
at Denbigh High School. Thus it advises that schools must be sensitive
to the needs of different cultures, races and religions, and contains
the expectation that schools should accommodate these needs within
a general uniform policy: "For example, allowing Muslim girls
to wear appropriate dress and Sikh boys to wear traditional headdress."
Para 11 of that guidance states:
"The Department does not consider it appropriate that any
pupil should be disciplined for non-compliance with a school uniform
policy which results from them having to adhere to a particular
cultural, race or religious code."
The judge held on the evidence that the claimant had not been
excluded. The School earnestly and sincerely wanted her to attend
school and placed no impediment or obstacle in her way. All it
did was to insist that when she came to school she was dressed
in accordance with the School?s uniform policy, as indeed she
had been happy to do for two years prior to September 2002:
"The Claimant had a choice, either of returning to school
wearing the school uniform or of refusing to wear the school uniform
knowing that if she did so refuse the Defendant was unlikely to
allow her to attend. She chose the latter. In my judgment it cannot
be said the actions and stance of the school amounted to exclusion,
either formal, informal, unofficial or in any way whatsoever."
I do not accept this analysis. The school undoubtedly did exclude
the claimant. They told her, in effect: "Go away, and do
not come back unless you are wearing proper school uniform."
They sent her away for disciplinary reasons because she was not
willing to comply with the discipline of wearing the prescribed
school uniform, and she was unable to return to the school for
the same reason. Education law does not allow a pupil of school
age to continue in the limbo in which the claimant found herself.
It was very soon clear that she was not willing to compromise
her beliefs despite the best efforts of the educational welfare
officers who visited her home and the teachers at the school who
tried to persuade her to return. If the statutory procedures and
departmental guidance had been followed, the impasse would have
been of very much shorter duration, and by one route or another
her school career (at one school or another) would have been put
back on track very much more quickly.
Was she excluded because her freedom to manifest her religion
or beliefs under ECHR Article 9(1) was being limited? Article
9 provides, so far as is material:
"(1)Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience
and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion
or belief, and freedom.in public or private to manifest his religion
or belief.
(2)Freedom to manifest one?s religion or beliefs shall be subject
only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary
in a democratic society in the interests of public safety, for
the protection of public order, health or morals or the protection
of the rights and freedoms of others."
The importance of the values set out in Article 9(1) was articulated
by the European Court of Human Rights in Kokkinakis v Greece,
25 May 1993, Series A No 160-A, p 17, at paras 31 and 32:
"31.As enshrined in Article 9, freedom of thought, conscience
and religion is one of the foundations of a ?democratic society?
within the meaning of the Convention. It is, in its religious
dimension, one of the most vital elements that go to make up the
identity of believers and their conception of life, but it is
also a precious asset for atheists, agnostics, sceptics and the
unconcerned. The pluralism indissociable from a democratic society,
which has been dearly won over the centuries, depends on it.
While religious freedom is primarily a matter of individual conscience,
it also implies, inter alia, freedom to ?manifest [one?s] religion?.
Bearing witness in words and deeds is bound up with the existence
of religious convictions.
33.The fundamental nature of the rights guaranteed in Article
9 para 1is also reflected in the wording of the paragraph providing
for limitations on them. Unlike the second paragraphs of Articles
8, 10 and 11which cover all the rights mentioned in the first
paragraphs of those Articles, that of Article 9 refers only to
?freedom to manifest one?s religion or belief?. In so doing, it
recognises that in democratic societies, in which several religions
co-exist within one and the same population, it may be necessary
to place restrictions on this freedom in order to reconcile the
interests of the various groups and ensure that everyone?s beliefs
are respected."
On this second issue the judge took note of the fact that the
claimant had been content to wear the shalwar kameeze for her
first two school years. He was willing to accept that her motives
and beliefs in desiring the change were completely genuine, but
he held that the School?s Governing Body Complaints Committee,
who eventually considered the matter in October and November 2003,
were entitled to find that the school uniform policy satisfied
all the requirements of the Islamic dress code.
He annexed a copy of the committee?s decision to his judgment.
After setting out the history of how the school?s uniform policy
had developed, the committee took into account the following matters
when reaching its decision:
The current school uniform policy was concluded after consultation
(which included local mosques) had found it to be acceptable;
The policy was reviewed regularly, and this was the first complaint
that had ever been made about its compatibility with the requirements
of the Islamic dress code;
Since the complaint had been made, the School had consulted various
authoritative bodies and received the following advice:
(a)The Islamic Cultural Centre in Regent?s Park had confirmed
that the shalwar kameeze constituted appropriate Islamic dress;
(b) The Muslim Council of Britain had confirmed that the dress
code prescribed by the School was in accordance with the tenets
of Islam.
The committee took note of the fact that the Imams of two local
mosques had given the Claimant?s solicitors different advice from
the advice they had previously given to the School, but they could
see no good reason for this change of mind;
The committee also took into account a written reply from the
London Central Mosque Trust on these matters.
Against this background the committee made the following findings
of fact about the requirements of the Islamic dress code for a
young woman of menstruation age:
(i)A Muslim woman?s dress should be strictly modest in public;
(ii)It should cover all her body with the exception of her face
and hands;
(iii)It should not be tight or revealing but must be loose and
thick enough in order to maintain complete modesty in public.
The committee concluded:
"The committee decided that the shalwar kameeze of the design
illustrated as part of the school uniform policy.satisfied all
those requirements of the Islamic dress code. Whilst accepting
that the jilbab such as [SB] wishes to wear constitutes proper
Islamic dress for adult Muslim women in a public place, the evidence
presented to the committee does not suggest that it is the only
form of dress that meets these requirements. Indeed, the evidence
in the form of the letter from the Islamic Cultural Centre.specifically
refers to the fact that a wide variety of garments are found throughout
the Muslim world that meet those requirements."
I now turn to consider the relevant evidence in rather greater
detail.
There was no expert evidence before the court, still less any
evidence that has been tested and explored in cross-examination.
There were, however, letters and expressions of opinion from a
number of well-informed sources, including the Imams of local
mosques, whom the parties consulted during the course of this
dispute. For anyone with a deep knowledge of the teachings of
Islam, what follows is bound to appear superficial, but this superficiality
necessarily flows from the nature of the limited evidential material
that is before the court. For the purposes of this judgment, because
the epithet "fundamentalist" has resonations which it
would be inappropriate to carry into the discussion of the issues
in this difficult case, I will refer to those Muslims who believe
that it is mandatory for women to wear the jilbab as "very
strict Muslims", and those Muslims whose South Asian culture
has accustomed them to consider the shalwar kameeze to be appropriate
dress for a woman as "liberal Muslims", while being
conscious that experts may find these epithets equally inappropriate.
The main sources of the Muslim religion are the Holy Quran, which
Muslims believe to represent the word of Allah, and Hadiths, or
sayings of the Prophet Muhammad, on different topics. A secondary
source of authority is a canon of practices and sayings that are
ascribed to Muhammad. These are known as the Sunnah, and a combination
of the Holy Quran, the Hadiths and the Sunnah provide the basis
for the Islamic laws known as the Shari?a. Scholars differ about
the authority of the Sunnah, and some of these differences are
apparent in the present dispute. In this field familiar problems
arise when early traditions pass down the generations by word
of mouth, and there is much scholarly dispute about the authority
and authenticity of the earliest surviving written texts.
All Muslims endeavour to follow the teachings in the Holy Quran,
which include the following:
"And tell the believing women to lower their gaze and guard
their sexuality, and to display of their adornment only what is
apparent, and to draw their head-coverings over their bosoms."
"O Prophet, tell your wives and daughters and the believing
women to draw their outer garments around them when they go out
or are among the men."
A Hadith of the Prophet states:
"Whenever a woman begins to menstruate, it is not right
that anything should be seen except her face and hands."
So much is common ground. What I will describe as the mainstream
modern view among Muslims in England today was expressed by Dr
Anas Abushudy, the deputy director-general of the London Central
Mosque Trust, and chairman of its Religious Affairs Department.
He told the School that "looking around the Muslim world"
there was an amazing variety of garments which met the requirements
in these writings. The clothes worn by Muslim women differed from
country to country, and sometimes in different regions in the
same country. He did not see any anti-Islamic act in wearing a
shalwar kameeze. The important thing was that the dress of Muslim
women must be within the Islamic guidelines, and that whatever
was worn should be a full and honest Islamic hijab (veil) which
clearly reflected the wearer?s identity.
He said that that there were many schools of thought on Islam,
which differed sometimes in the interpretation of the sayings
of Allah. What he described represented the general consensus
of the vast majority of Muslim scholars.
A contrary view was expressed to the claimant?s solicitors by
Dr Ahmed Belouafi, of the Centre for Islamic Studies in Birmingham.
He originally gave this brief response:
"[W]e can confirm that with respect to the dress code of
the female in Islam is the fact that Hijab is the minimum required
dress. The traditional dress, be it Pakistani or Egyptianetc.,
that some females wore are not enough if they do not meet the
required conditions of the dress code as laid down in the teaching
of the Quran and the Sunnah of the Prophet."
In a follow-up letter he set out, with regard to "the issue
of the dress code of a woman in Islam", certain rulings derived
by Sheikh Al-Albani, a famous scholar and traditionalist, from
various sources of Islamic jurisprudence:
The whole body except for the exempted parts [face and hands]
should be covered;
Any veil, which itself becomes an attraction, is to be avoided;
Garments should not be semi-transparent;
Dress should not be tight-fitting;
Garments should not be perfumed;
The form of dress should not in any way resemble that of a man;
It should not resemble that of non-believers;
Garments should not reflect worldly honour.
Dr Belouafi said that these basic requirements must be observed
in any garments that women wore under the Islamic dress code,
and that it was clear that the shalwar kameeze shown to him by
the claimant?s solicitors did not comply. (Unfortunately he had
been sent a photograph of a girl in a shalwar kameeze whose arms
were not covered, whose kameeze stopped at the knees, and whose
shalwar consisted of ordinary trousers, rather than loose trousers
gathered at the ankle: it may be that the opinions of other people
consulted by the claimant?s advisers might have been different
if they had seen the School?s actual design).
Dr Belouafi annexed to his response a copy of an article drawn
down from the Internet. Although it is entitled "Hijab in
the Light of the Quran and Hadith", it is clear that Sheikh
Al-Albani also drew from other early texts when he drew up his
"eight rules of hijab".
Dr Abushudy, for his part, had told the School that because the
interpretation of sayings sometimes differed, what he described
as the Seven Conditions of Hijab were not totally accurate and
therefore not valid for all.
These two differing viewpoints, one more liberal, the other more
strict, recurred again and again in the opinions expressed by
other consultees, and sometimes within the same organisation.
For instance, within the Muslim Council of Britain (which was
founded in 1997 and now has over 350 institutions affiliated to
it) there was a striking difference of approach between the chair
of its Social Affairs Committee and the Chair of its Mosque and
Community Affairs Committee.
The former, when consulted by the Comparative Religion Centre,
produced a list of about 20 guiding principles entitled "Dress
Code for Woman in Islam". This code said that Islam was a
very practical and pragmatic religion. It allowed flexibility
within its prescribed tenets. "Follow the middle path"
was the proper approach. The wardrobe of a young Muslim girl or
woman could be as varied as one would like it to be. Modesty should
be observed at all times. If the headdress did not cover the bosom
it could be covered by a separate cloth, scarf or jacket, and
trousers with long tops and shirts for school wear were absolutely
fine. A Muslim schoolgirl?s uniform did not have to be so long
that there would be a risk of tripping over and causing accidents.
The latter, however, said that in order to fulfil the obligation
prescribed by the Holy Quran a Muslim woman must wear an outer
garment, such as a jilbab, that was loose-fitting and did not
show her body or shape in public. He said that the majority view
of ulama (jurists) was that the shalwar kameeze would not be sufficient
to fulfil the requirements of Shari?a, because the shape of the
bodily parts was not hidden, although it was accepted culturally
as the female dress of many South Asian Muslims. His own considered
opinion, in the light of rulings of Shari?a, was that the shalwar
kameeze did not fulfil the Islamic dress requirement in public.
This opinion was shared by the Muslim Welfare House in Seven
Sisters Road, London, who gave advice along the lines of that
given by Dr Belouafi. They said that descriptively these requirements
could be translated as a headscarf to cover the head and an outer
body garment similar to at least a three-quarter length coat.
They added that the Pakistani clothing known as shalwar kameeze
dress did not meet the requirement of an outer garment. There
is no evidence that they were shown the School?s design.
In December 2002 the Imams of two local mosques in Luton advised
the School that the shalwar kameeze was the dress that fulfilled
the requirements of Islamic dressing and that for a lady it was
not an anti-Islamic dress. However, when they were each approached
by the claimant?s solicitors six months later they qualified this
advice. The Imam of the Madinah mosque in Luton quoted not only
from a translation of the Holy Quran which refers to the jilbab
("Jalbaab") but also from a commentary on the Quran
in these terms:
"It is related from the son of Abbasthat the definition of
Jalbaab is that it be a long cloak in which a woman be covered
from head to toe."
(Commentary of Huwair in refce from Al Quran, vol 7, p 217)
After reciting advice similar to that given by Dr Belouafi he
said that in his opinion the claimant was correct in relation
to the rights she was demanding from the School.
The Imam of the Central Mosque in Luton, Professor Masood Akhtar
Hazarvi, made a distinction between his earlier answer to the
effect that the shalwar kameeze was not anti-Islamic and his new
answer that it did not comply with the Islamic rules for the dress
required of a mature Muslim lady in a public place (like a school).
He was of the opinion that the claimant?s jilbab was "a requirement
from Islam".
This was clearly the professor?s personal view as a theologian.
He also happened to chair the Luton Council of Mosques, which
was formed in April 2003 as an umbrella organisation representing
about 36,000 local residents who embraced the Muslim faith. In
that capacity he told the School in March 2004 that the council
believed that the School?s uniform policy was satisfactory for
the majority of the Muslim community.
From all this evidence one can see clearly the two main schools
of thought (I exclude, for instance, those who rely on the interpretation
of other ancient texts for their belief that a woman?s face should
also be covered). The first, which represents mainstream opinion
among South Asian Muslims, from whom most of this country?s Muslim
population are descended, is that a garment like the shalwar kameeze
(coupled with a headscarf) complies sufficiently with Islamic
dress requirements, and that there is no need to go any further.
The other, which is a minority view among Muslims in this country,
but is nevertheless sincerely held, is that the shalwar kameeze,
even when it goes down to mid-calf, is not compliant, and that
a garment like the jilbab, which disguises the shape of the wearer?s
arms and legs, is required. This minority view received respectable
support among those who were consulted during the course of this
dispute. It was no doubt what Professor Masood Hazarvi had in
mind when he told the School that the Luton Council of Mosques
believed that the School?s uniform policy was satisfactory "for
the majority of the Muslim community".
The sincerity of the claimant?s belief in the correctness of
the minority view was not in issue in these proceedings. She believed
that her religion prohibited her from displaying as much of her
body as would be visible if she was wearing the shalwar kameeze,
particularly if she was not wearing the school jumper over it
in hot weather. So far as the legitimacy of her belief is concerned,
in Hasan and Chaush v Bulgaria (26th October 2000: Appln No. 30985/96)
the European Court of Human Rights said (at para 78):
"[The court] recalls that, but for very exceptional cases,
the right to freedom of religion as guaranteed under the Convention
excludes any discretion on the part of the State to determine
whether religious beliefs or the means used to express such beliefs
are legitimate."
It follows that her freedom to manifest her religion or belief
in public was being limited, and as a matter of Convention law
it would be for the School, as an emanation of the state, to justify
the limitation on her freedom created by the School?s uniform
code and by the way in which it was enforced.
I turn now to the third question. For the purposes of this case,
SB?s freedom to manifest her religion or beliefs may only be subject
to limitations that are prescribed by law and are necessary in
a democratic society in the interests of public safety, for the
protection of public morals, or for the protection of the rights
and freedoms of others. There was no suggestion that the protection
of public morals had any relevance, and a justification on health
and safety grounds was dismissed by the judge and not resurrected
on the appeal once evidence had showed that other schools (including
the local school which the claimant now attends) had been able
to accommodate girls wearing the jilbab without any serious concern
being raised on that ground.
Three witness statements from the School addressed this issue.
Mr Moore, the Assistant Headteacher, devoted most of his evidence
to explaining why he was concerned to enforce the School?s uniform
policy, and the support that policy had received from those the
School had consulted, both locally and nationally. His witness
statement ends in these terms:
"Several staff have been approached by non-Muslim pupils
saying that they are afraid of people wearing the jilbab, as they
perceive this form of dress to be associated with extreme views.
This makes them feel vulnerable. Whilst I would not consider it
right to pander to the prejudices or fears of some pupils, I think
it would be most unfortunate if some pupils were to be held in
fear by others, or regarded as in some way separate, because of
the clothes they wear.
Similarly this view has also been reflected by some Muslim girls
who have indicated to staff that they do not wish to wear the
jilbab, as this would identify them as belonging to extreme Muslim
sects. They do not wish to be identified with such people.
In a recent pupil survey, not connected with wearing of the jilbab,
there was a space for further comments. Many pupils indicated
how much they liked Denbigh High School and the uniform in particular.
One pupil suggested that the school introduce the jilbab. She
did not suggest that she wanted to wear one. As she wears trousers
to school and not the shalwar kameeze, I think it unlikely that
she would wish to adopt the jilbab. There have been no other suggestions
from pupils, parents, governors or teachers that we adopt the
jilbab.
At the Appeal hearing the Claimant indicated that although she
does not regard Muslims who wear the shalwar kameeze as bad people,
she does think better Muslims wear the jilbab. I would not wish
to see the introduction of two classes of Muslim, the inferior
class that wears the shalwar kameeze and the better Muslim who
wears the jilbab. In my view that would lead to real risk of pressure
being brought upon Muslim girls to wear the jilbab or be regarded
as religious inferiors. I would fear that this could lead to some
girls feeling pressured into wearing the jilbab when they would
prefer to wear the shalwar kameeze and might wish to avoid being
classified with the kinds of people they believe wear the jilbab."
He ended by expressing a concern that if the school uniform was
changed in the way the claimant suggested, this would lead to
divisiveness within the school and would threaten the cohesion
within the school.
Mr Connor, who has been the Deputy Headteacher since 1997, had
six years? experience in the culturally diverse London Borough
of Brent in the late 1980s. The earlier part of his statement
was devoted to the concerns on health and safety grounds that
are not now being pursued on this appeal. He then turned to explain
that a major learning objective on the part of the curriculum
concerned with citizenship was for pupils to work together positively
and co-operatively in a community that fosters respect for all.
In this context he drew on his experience of working in schools
that incorporate wide diversity. He said there is the potential
for pupils to identify themselves as distinct from other groups
along cultural, religious or racial grounds, and for conflict
to develop between such groups. He recalled an earlier incident
in this school which had involved a very difficult and potentially
dangerous situation of intransigent conflict between two groups
of pupils who defined themselves along racial grounds. This was
one of the reasons for a uniform policy that did not allow pupils
to identify themselves obviously as belonging to a particular
religion or race.
It was important in his experience to recognise that many adolescents
require a lot of support to understand the importance of inclusion,
equal opportunities, mutual respect and social cohesion, such
as was fostered by the school?s uniform policy. He attested to
the same concerns among a number of girls at the school as Mr
Moore had mentioned, and he believed that the school had a duty
to protect these pupils from inappropriate peer pressures, or
pressures from outside extremist groups. There had been an incident
in February 2004 when some young men who represented an extremist
Muslim group had picketed the school gates and distributed leaflets
to the pupils which exhorted Muslims not to send their children
to secular schools. A number of pupils understandably felt harassed
by these activities.
At the end of his statement Mr Connor expressed a concern that
any erosion of the uniform policy would make it more difficult
for the school to recruit and retain staff. This was partly because
he believed that the present clear policy contributed to the school?s
ethos of good behaviour and discipline. It was also partly because
this was a secular school, and this was very important to many
teachers who believe strongly that they do not wish to be associated
with promoting a particular faith. If a new school uniform policy
resulted in a significant proportion of pupils outwardly identifying
themselves according to their faith, this could create the impression
that this was a school which favoured that faith.
Mrs Bevan, the Headteacher, gave evidence similar to that given
by Mr Moore and Mr Connor about the concerns expressed by children
at the school, both Muslim and non-Muslim, and also by a number
of parents. She said that she had been given the firm impression
that a number of girls relied on the school to help them resist
the pressures from the more extreme groups. She was afraid that
if the school uniform were to be adapted to include the jilbab
these girls would be deprived of proper protection and would feel
abandoned by those upon whom they were relying to preserve their
freedom to follow their own part of the Islamic tradition. She
also referred to the picketing that had taken place "by groups
of mainly young men who would appear to be from the more extreme
Muslim traditions".
She said that all the requirements of the school uniform were
well publicised before the claimant chose to attend the School.
She was being treated in exactly the same way as all other pupils,
a very high percentage of whom were Muslim, and since the requirements
of the uniform policy were satisfactory to her for two years,
and were also satisfactory to all the School?s other pupils both
past and present, she did not see how the School was discriminating
against her.
The reasons given by the Chair of the Governors and by the Governors?
Complaints Committee in the autumn of 2003 for rejecting SB?s
complaints did not add significantly to the reasons given by the
School?s senior staff. The Complaints Committee observed that
they did not purport to have the legal knowledge to interpret
complex legislation.
On the assumption (which he had rejected) that Article 9(1) was
engaged in this case, the judge accepted the School?s case that
the limitations on the claimant?s right to manifest her religion
or beliefs were necessary for the protection of the rights and
freedoms of others. His reasons can be summarised in this way:
The School is a multi-cultural, multi-faith secular school;
The school uniform policy clearly promoted a positive ethos and
a sense of communal identity;
There was no outward distinction between Muslim, Hindu and Sikh
female students, and the shalwar kameeze also satisfied the right
of Muslim female students to manifest their religion;
Any distinction between Muslim students who wore the jilbab and
those who wore the shalwar kameeze was avoided;
The present policy protects the rights and freedoms of not an
insignificant number of Muslim female pupils who do not wish to
wear the jilbab and either do, or will feel pressure on them to
do so from inside or outside the school;
If the choice of two uniforms were permitted for Muslim female
pupils, it could be readily understood that other pupils of different
or no faiths might well see this as favouring a particular religion.
The judge concluded in these terms (at para 91):
"In my judgment the school uniform policy and its enforcement
has, and continues to have, a legitimate aim and is proportionate.
The legitimate aim was the proper running of a multi-cultural,
multi-faith, secular school. The limitation was also proportionate
to the legitimate aim pursued. The limitation was specifically
devised with the advice of the Muslim community. Although it appears
that there is a body of opinion within the Muslim faith that only
the jilbab meets the requirements of its dress code there is also
a body of opinion that the Shalwar Kameeze does as well. In my
judgment, the adoption of the Shalwar Kameeze by the Defendant
as the school uniform for Muslim (and other faiths) female pupils
was and continues to be a reasoned, balanced, proportionate policy."
I turn now to set out my conclusions on this appeal. In my judgment,
the limitation on the claimant?s Article 9(1) freedom was one
that was prescribed by law in the Convention sense. The governors
were entitled by law to set a school uniform policy for the School.
They published a clear, written policy which was available to
all who might be affected by it, and the requirements of the ECHR
for law that is both accessible and clear were satisfied in this
respect. But was that limitation necessary?
The ECHR caselaw to which we were referred related to countries
like Switzerland and Turkey which maintain a national policy of
secular education in their state maintained schools. I did not
derive any assistance from the cases we were shown which related
to employment disputes.
In Dahlab v Switzerland (15th February 2001; Appln No 42393/98)
the court declared inadmissible a complaint by a primary school
teacher who had been prohibited from wearing an Islamic headscarf
at her school. The court acknowledged the margin of appreciation
afforded to the national authorities when determining whether
this measure was "necessary in a democratic society",
and explained its role in these terms (at p 11):
"The Court?s task is to determine whether the measures taken
at national level were justified in principle that is, whether
the reasons adduced to justify them appear ?relevant and sufficient?
and are proportionate to the legitimate aim pursued In order to
rule on this latter point, the Court must weigh the requirements
of the protection of the rights and liberties of others against
the conduct of which the applicant stood accused. In exercising
the supervisory jurisdiction, the court must look at the impugned
judicial decisions against the background of the case as a whole..."
In that case the need to protect the principle of denominational
neutrality in Swiss schools was treated as a very important factor
which militated successfully against the applicant?s case.
In Sahin v Turkey (29th June 2004; Appln No 44774/98) the applicant
had been denied access to written examinations and to a lecture
at the University of Istanbul because she was wearing an Islamic
headscarf. This was prohibited not only by the rules of the university
but also by the Constitution of Turkey, as interpreted in 1989
and 1991 by the Constitutional Court of Turkey. The European Court
of Human Rights noted (in paragraphs 53 to 57) that attitudes
towards wearing the Islamic headscarf in schools differed in different
European countries. It accepted (at para 71) that the applicant
was motivated by her desire to comply strictly with the duties
imposed by the Islamic faith. It found (at para 81) that there
was a basis for interference in Turkish law which was accessible
and sufficiently precise in its views. The applicant conceded
(at para 83) that in view of the importance of upholding the principle
of secularism and ensuring the neutrality of universities in Turkey,
the interference could be regarded as compatible with the legitimate
aims of protecting the rights and freedoms of others and of protecting
public order. She vigorously disputed, however, the contention
that the interference was necessary in a democratic society.
The Court first discussed the relevant principles and then applied
them to the facts of this particular case. Although it made reference
to the principle of gender equality, it placed most weight on
the principle of secularism in Turkey. It said (at para 99)
"In a country like Turkey, where the great majority of the
population belong to a particular religion, measures taken in
universities to prevent certain fundamentalist religious movements
from exerting pressure on students who do not practise that religion
or on those who belong to another religion may be justified under
Article 9(2) of the Convention."
It went on to say (at para 101) that where questions concerning
the relationship between State and religion were at stake, on
which opinion in a democratic society might reasonably differ
widely, the role of the national decision-making body had to be
given special importance. In such cases it was necessary to have
regard to the fair balance that must be struck between the various
interests at stake: the rights and freedoms of others, avoiding
civil unrest, the demands of public order, and pluralism.
In applying these principles to the facts of the particular case
the court said (at paras 104-6)
"104.It must first be observed that the interference was
based, in particular, on two principles secularism and equality
which reinforce and complement each other.
105.In its judgment of 7 March 1989, the Constitutional Court
stated that secularism in Turkey was, among other things, the
guarantor of democratic values, the principle that freedom of
religion is inviolable to the extent that it stems from individual
conscience and the principle that citizens are equal before the
law.Secularism also protected the individual from external pressure.
It added that restrictions could be placed on freedom to manifest
one?s religion in order to defend those values and principles.
106.This notion of secularism appears to the Court to be consistent
with the values underpinning the Convention and it accepts that
upholding that principle may be regarded as necessary for the
protection of the democratic system in Turkey."
The court also noted (at para 107) the emphasis placed on the
Turkish constitutional system on the protection of the rights
of women. Gender equality recognised by the European Court as
one of the key principles underlying the Convention and a goal
to be achieved by member States of the Council of Europe had also
been found by the Turkish Constitutional Court to be a principle
implicit in the values underlying the Turkish constitution.
Matters the court took into account (at paras 108-109) when concluding
that the national authorities in Turkey were entitled to prohibit
the wearing of a Muslim headscarf in a university included:
The impact which wearing a headscarf, which is presented or perceived
as a compulsory religious duty, might have on those who chose
not to wear it;
The fact that Turkey was a country where the majority of the
population, while professing a strong attachment to the rights
of women and a secular way of life, adhered to the Islamic faith;
In such a context, imposing limitations on freedom in this sphere
might be regarded as meeting a pressing social need by seeking
to achieve those two legitimate aims, especially since the Muslim
headscarf had taken on political significance in Turkey in recent
years;
The fact that there were extremist political movements in Turkey
which might seek to impose on society as a whole their religious
symbols and conception of a society founded on religious precepts:
a Contracting State was permitted, in accordance with the ECHR
provisions, to take a stance against such political movements,
based on its historical experience.
Against this background the court dismissed the applicant?s complaint,
saying (at para 110) that it was understandable in such a context
where the values of pluralism, respect for the rights of others
and, in particular, equality of men and women before the law,
were being taught and applied in practice, that the relevant authorities
would consider that it ran counter to the furtherance of such
values to accept the wearing of religious insignia, including,
as in the present case, that women students cover their heads
with a headscarf while on university premises.
I have considered the case of Sahin in some detail for four main
reasons. First, it is a recent judgment in which the European
Court of Justice has set out carefully the structured way in which
issues of this kind are to be considered under the Convention.
Secondly, it shows that context is all-important: there are considerations
to be applied in a state which professes the value of secularism
in its Constitution which are not necessarily to be applied in
the United Kingdom. Thirdly and we did not receive any argument
on this issue there are clearly potential tensions between the
rights and freedoms set out in a Convention agreed more than 50
years ago between Western European countries which on the whole
adhered to Judaeo-Christian traditions, and some of the tenets
of the Islamic faith that relate to the position of women in society.
And fourthly, it is clear that a decision-maker is entitled to
take into account worries like those expressed by the senior teaching
staff of the School when it is deciding whether it is necessary
to prohibit a person like the claimant from manifesting her religion
or beliefs in public in the way in which she would wish.
The United Kingdom is very different from Turkey. It is not a
secular state, and although the Human Rights Act is now part of
our law we have no written Constitution. In England and Wales
express provision is made for religious education and worship
in schools in Chapter VI of the 1998 Act. Schools are under a
duty to secure that religious education in schools is given to
pupils, and that each pupil should take part in an act of collective
worship every day, unless withdrawn by their parent. Sections
80(1)(a) and 101(1)(a) of the 2002 Act require the inclusion of
religious education in the basic curriculum.
The position of the School is already distinctive in the sense
that despite its policy of inclusiveness it permits girls to wear
a headscarf which is likely to identify them as Muslim. The central
issue is therefore the more subtle one of whether, given that
Muslim girls can already be identified in this way, it is necessary
in a democratic society to place a particular restriction on those
Muslim girls at this school who sincerely believe that when they
arrive at the age of puberty they should cover themselves more
comprehensively than is permitted by the school uniform policy.
The decision-making structure should therefore go along the following
lines:
1)Has the claimant established that she has a relevant Convention
right which qualifies for protection under Article 9(1)?
2)Subject to any justification that is established under Article
9(2), has that Convention right been violated?
3)Was the interference with her Convention right prescribed by
law in the Convention sense of that expression?
4)Did the interference have a legitimate arm?
5)What are the considerations that need to be balanced against
each other when determining whether the interference was necessary
in a democratic society for the purpose of achieving that aim?
6)Was the interference justified under Article 9(2)?
The School did not approach the matter in this way at all. Nobody
who considered the issues on its behalf started from the premise
that the claimant had a right which is recognised by English law,
and that the onus lay on the School to justify its interference
with that right. Instead, it started from the premise that its
uniform policy was there to be obeyed: if the claimant did not
like it, she could go to a different school.
The chair of the governors, whose decision is set out in full
in paragraph 25 of Bennett J?s judgment, adopted this line. He
ended his decision dismissively by saying that it would not be
appropriate "to make any further provisions for individuals?
interpretations of religious codes." The Complaints Committee,
too, was satisfied that the shalwar kameeze constituted "appropriate
Islamic dress" or was "in accordance with the tenets
of Islam", and while it accepted that the jilbab constituted
proper Islamic dress for adult Muslim women, it did not explore
the reasons why the claimant sincerely believed that she must
wear it. Indeed, the committee could see no good reason for the
local mosques "apparently changing their minds", without
appreciating that the two Imams had been addressing two quite
different questions (see paras 44-47 above), namely whether the
shalwar kameeze was or was not inappropriate for Muslim girls,
and what in their view the teachings of Islam really required.
In my judgment, therefore, because it approached the issues in
this case from an entirely wrong direction and did not attribute
to the claimant?s beliefs the weight they deserved, the School
is not entitled to resist the declarations she seeks, namely:
That it unlawfully excluded her from school;
That it unlawfully denied her the right to manifest her religion;
That it unlawfully denied her access to suitable and appropriate
education.
So far as this third matter is concerned, I am satisfied that
the claimant is entitled to this declaration without the need
for any inquiry into the rights and wrongs of what actually happened
during the two years in which she was away from school when the
School maintained that it was trying to send schoolwork to her
at home. Any such expedient would have been inferior to a proper
education, at best: compare A v Headteacher and Governors of Lord
Grey School [2004] EWCA Civ 382 per Sedley LJ at [60].
The claimant no longer seeks a mandatory order that the School
make swift arrangements for her return to school, and she also
no longer seeks damages.
Nothing in this judgment should be taken as meaning that it would
be impossible for the School to justify its stance if it were
to reconsider its uniform policy in the light of this judgment
and were to determine not to alter it in any significant respect.
Matters which it (and other schools facing a similar question)
would no doubt need to consider include these:
Whether the members of any further religious groups (other than
very strict Muslims) might wish to be free to manifest their religion
or beliefs by wearing clothing not currently permitted by the
school?s uniform policy, and the effect that a larger variety
of different clothes being worn by students for religious reasons
would have on the School?s policy of inclusiveness;
Whether it is appropriate to override the beliefs of very strict
Muslims given that liberal Muslims have been permitted the dress
code of their choice and the School?s uniform policy is not entirely
secular;
Whether it is appropriate to take into account any, and if so
which, of the concerns expressed by the School?s three witnesses
as good reasons for depriving a student like the claimant of her
right to manifest her beliefs by the clothing she wears at school,
and the weight which should be accorded to each of these concerns;
Whether there is any way in which the School can do more to reconcile
its wish to retain something resembling its current uniform policy
with the beliefs of those like the claimant who consider that
it exposes more of their bodies than they are permitted by their
beliefs to show.
All this is for the future, and this case has achieved the result
of ensuring that schools will set about deciding issues of this
kind in the manner now required of them by the Human Rights Act.
It may be thought desirable for the DfES to give schools further
guidance in the light of this judgment: one is bound to sympathise
with the teachers and governors of this school when they have
had to try and understand quite complex and novel considerations
of human rights law in the absence of authoritative written guidance.
For the present, however, I would allow this appeal and grant
the claimant the three declarations she seeks.
Lord Justice Mummery :
For the reasons given by Brooke and Scott Baker LJJ I agree that
this appeal should be allowed. I only wish to add short comments
on three points.
A. Justification
The claimant has succeeded in demonstrating that her right under
Article 9(1) was engaged. She had the right to manifest her religion
in the matter of dress at School. The effect of the School?s stance
on its uniform policy was that the claimant was unlawfully excluded
from the School for not wearing the uniform, to which, for religious
reasons, she objected. It was no answer for the School to say
that she could have attended School if only she had chosen to
wear the school uniform. Nor is it relevant to compare her position
with that of an employee who is free to leave his employment and
to find work with a different employer. (Ahmad v. UK (1981) 4
EHRR 126 and Stedman v. UK (1997) 23 EHRR CD 168 were cited on
the position of employees asserting Article 9 rights). It is irrelevant
to the engagement of Article 9 that the claimant could have changed
to a school which accommodated her religious beliefs about dress.
Education at the School or at another school was not a contractual
choice. There was a statutory duty to provide education to the
pupils. The School did not follow the proper statutory procedure
for excluding her from education.
As the claimant has now moved to another school and will not
be returning to the School, that is the end of the matter as far
as she is concerned. She does not pursue a claim for damages.
The case is about a point of principle. Declaratory relief is
an adequate remedy. It should be emphasised, however, that, in
general, the engagement of the right would not be the end of the
matter. In fact, it would be the beginning of another stage. The
next stage would be considerably more complex. The scope of the
right and its exercise would be subject to the limitations in
Article 9(2), which the School may seek to rely on to justify
the school uniform policy. Freedom to manifest one?s religion
is subject, for example, to such limitations prescribed by law
as "are necessary in a democratic society for..the protection
of the rights and freedoms of others."
The process of justification of a limitation on the right to
manifest one?s religion involves a careful and wise analysis in
the very difficult and sensitive area of the relation of religion
to various aspects of the life of the individual living in community
with other individuals, who also possess rights and freedoms.
The right to manifest one?s religion under Article 9 is not necessarily
a valid reason for overriding the social responsibilities of the
individual holder of the right to others living in the community.
As is pointed out in the judgment of Brooke LJ (paragraph 81)
it would still be possible for the School, on a structured reconsideration
of the relevant issues, including the Article 9 right of a person
in the position of the claimant, to justify its stance on the
school uniform policy. If it could, there would be no breach of
the Article 9(1) right.
B. The Role of the Court
In some quarters this decision may be seen as an instance of the
court and/or the claimant overruling the Headteacher and the Governors
of the School, undermining their authority on an internal school
matter and interfering in the running of the School. That would
be a misconception. The role of the court is confined to deciding
whether the claimant was unlawfully excluded from the School and
unlawfully denied her right to manifest her religion. The court
has found that the relevant issues were, from a legal aspect,
approached from the wrong direction. The result is that there
was unlawful treatment of the claimant. As already explained,
this does not mean that would be impossible for the School, if
the matter were approached from the right direction, to justify
the school uniform policy with regard to another pupil adopting
the same position as the claimant.
C. Guidance
I agree with Brooke LJ on the need for teachers and governors
to be given authoritative written guidance on the handling of
human rights issues in schools. There are many issues that members
of the staff, parents and pupils could raise under the Human Rights
Act 1998 in respect of most of the Articles in the Convention.
Headteachers and governors of all kinds of schools need help to
cope with this additional burden. They need to be made aware of
the impact of the 1998 Act on schools. They need clear, constructive
and practical advice on how to anticipate and prepare for problems,
how to spot them as and when they arise and how to deal with them
properly. It would be a great pity, if through lack of expert
guidance, schools were to find themselves frequently in court
having to use valuable time and resources, which would be better
spent on improving the education of their pupils.
Lord Justice Scott Baker:
I agree with the judgment of Brooke L.J and the declarations that
he proposes. In particular I wish to associate myself with his
observations about the decision-making structure that should have
been followed and should be followed in similar circumstances
in future.
I have, however, considerable sympathy with the School and its
governors in the predicament that they faced. They did not appreciate
that they faced four square an issue that engaged Article 9 of
the ECHR. It is perhaps understandable that a school that can
rightly be proud of its contribution to the welfare of members
of a multicultural society should have taken the line that it
did, albeit one that on careful analysis has been shown to be
erroneous in law.
Had the School approached the problem on the basis it should
have done, that the claimant had a right under Article 9(1) to
manifest her religion, it may very well have concluded that interference
with that right was justified under Article 9(2) and that its
uniform policy could thus have been maintained. Regrettably, however,
it decided that because the shalwar kameeze was acceptable for
the majority of Muslims the claimant should be required to toe
the line.
As Brooke L.J. has pointed out, there are two different views
in the Muslim community about the appropriate dress for women
one, held by very strict Muslims, being that it is mandatory for
women to wear the jilbab. The fact that this view is held by a
minority, or even a small minority is in my judgment nothing to
the point in considering the issue whether Article 9(1) is engaged.
There is in my view force in the criticism that it is not for
school authorities to pick and choose between religious beliefs
or shades of religious belief.
The United Kingdom is not a secular state; there is no principle
of denominational neutrality in our schools. Provision is made
for religious education and worship in schools under Chapter VI
of the School Standards and Framework Act 1998. Every shade of
religious belief, if genuinely held, is entitled to due consideration
under Article 9. What went wrong in this case was that the School
failed to appreciate that by its action it was infringing the
claimant?s Article 9(1) right to manifest her religion. It should
have gone on to consider whether a limitation of her right was
justified under Article 9(2) in the light of the particular circumstances
at the School. As it did not carry out this exercise it is not
possible to conclude what the result would have been. The way
matters progressed the claimant was excluded from the school without
following the appropriate procedures and her Article 9(1) rights
were violated in the process.