Swedish party wants to ban Muslim veils, crosses for public servants

  17 July 2017    Read: 1147
Swedish party wants to ban Muslim veils, crosses for public servants
Amid a heated debate over whether to prohibit women from wearing face-covering Muslim headdresses in the workplace in Scandinavia, the Sweden Democrats have moved to forbid any county official from wearing any religious symbols to work at all, whether it's a Muslim headdress or a Christian cross.
According to a new motion by the right-wing Sweden Democrats, it should be prohibited for county officials to wear political, religious or ideological symbols during working hours.
"I think the county council should be neutral as a public authority, just as I think the police should be neutral as well," Sweden Democrats member Anton Berglund told Swedish national broadcaster SVT.

Earlier, the European Court of Justice ruled that employers have the right to prohibit employees from wearing religious garments, such as the Muslim veil at work. With reference to this, the Swedish Democrats in the county of Sörmland seek to forbid county officials from wearing religious, political or ideological symbols during working hours.

"Healthcare should be neutral as well: if you wear political or religious symbols, you won't be seen as neutral any longer," Anton Berglund said.

According to Berglund, the ban should be comprehensive and encompass even smaller symbols, such as a cross worn around the neck.
"Personally, I do not think you should have any kind of political or religious symbol visible," Berglund said.

According to Sörmland County Councilwoman Monica Johansson of the Social Democratic Party, it is too early to take a stance on this matter before it has been investigated by officials.

"Generally speaking, though, it's best to refrain from wearing any religious symbols on your work clothes other than a badge with your name and position," Monica Johansson told SVT.

Ironically, SVT's own enterprise Halal TV, which has been running for almost nine years, recently sparked a controversy for featuring a veiled anchor reading the weather forecast.

In the autumn of 2008, the Swedish state media giant attempted to appeal to a broader Muslim public by launching special broadcasts abridged to Muslim standards. 'Halal' is a Muslim term denoting something pure and righteous.
Now, almost nine years later, a screenshot from Halal TV was featured in a much-debated tweet by British Alt-Right Youtube personality Paul Joseph Watson.

Many users responded to the fact that Swedish TV had no qualms about showing veiled women, while women in a Muslim Arab country like Iraq no longer wear Muslim apparel in front of the camera.

​In 2015, the Bishop of Stockholm Eva Brunne, who was previously hailed as the world's first lesbian bishop, sparked a major controversy with her proposal to remove all signs of the cross and arrange a Muslim prayer room in a church in her diocese in order to make people of other faiths more welcome.

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