Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Muslim Group Asks PM Stephen Harper To Drop 'Unnecessary' Veil Appeal

The Canadian Press, 14 Feb, 2015 03:06 PM
    CALGARY - A Muslim group based in Calgary is urging the prime minister to reverse his plans for the government to appeal a court ruling on face coverings.
     
    The Islamic Supreme Council of Canada says the Federal Court's decision to allow face coverings during citizenship ceremonies is "not an important issue," but that Stephen Harper is "unnecessarily" making it one.
     
    The council says it's clear that wearing a niqab, which is worn by some Muslim women in public areas and in front of men who are not relatives, is not a security issue.
     
    It says the identity of someone wearing a niqab during a citizenship ceremony can be verified by the judge before the oath is sworn.
     
    A federal judge ruled in Ottawa that a portion of the law requiring citizenship candidates to remove their face coverings while taking the oath was unlawful.
     
    The council says wearing a niqab is a personal choice just like wearing a very short dress.
     
    "Niqab during citizenship does not undermine any Canadian, Western or Christian values," the council stated in the news release.
     
    "In fact, if our prime minister respects the Federal Court's decision, it will show the respect for the law and the respect for the freedom to choose, which is a very important Canadian value."
     
    Harper said Thursday that he believes most Canadians consider it offensive someone "would hide their identity at the very moment where they are committing to join the Canadian family.''
     
    The case had been brought on by Zunera Ishaq, a Pakistani national who had sued the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration claiming the government's policy on veils violated the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
     
    Khadr interview ban not political, judge says

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Transit Police Arrest A Teen With Air Pistol Resembling A Handgun In New Westminster

    Transit Police Arrest A Teen With Air Pistol Resembling A Handgun In New Westminster
    VANCOUVER — Transit Police in Metro Vancouver say they have arrested a 17-year-old boy who was carrying an air pistol resembling a handgun.

    Transit Police Arrest A Teen With Air Pistol Resembling A Handgun In New Westminster

    Woman's Allegations Of Robbery, Confinement, Threats Were False: B.C. RCMP

    Woman's Allegations Of Robbery, Confinement, Threats Were False: B.C. RCMP
    NANAIMO, B.C. — Six people spent much of a day locked up in a Vancouver Island RCMP detachment over what police now say were false robbery and confinement allegations.

    Woman's Allegations Of Robbery, Confinement, Threats Were False: B.C. RCMP

    Bennett Says B.C. Utilities Commission To Resume Setting BC Hydro Rates

    Bennett Says B.C. Utilities Commission To Resume Setting BC Hydro Rates
    VICTORIA — The B.C. government has vowed to make the provincial utilities commission more independent almost three years after it stepped in and refused to allow the body to raise hydro rates for customers.

    Bennett Says B.C. Utilities Commission To Resume Setting BC Hydro Rates

    Lawyer Says Authorities Trying To Embarrass Hunter Accused Of Killing Sheep In Yukon

    Lawyer Says Authorities Trying To Embarrass Hunter Accused Of Killing Sheep In Yukon
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Conservation authorities are trying to discredit and embarrass his client, says a lawyer representing an alleged cross-border poacher accused of lying about where he shot a record-setting Dall sheep.

    Lawyer Says Authorities Trying To Embarrass Hunter Accused Of Killing Sheep In Yukon

    A List Of The Victims Along Infamous B.C.'s Highway Of Tears

    A List Of The Victims Along Infamous B.C.'s Highway Of Tears
    VANCOUVER — A list of the 18 women and girls whose deaths and disappearances are part of the RCMP's investigation of the Highway of Tears in British Columbia. They were either found or last seen near Highways 16, 97 or 5:

    A List Of The Victims Along Infamous B.C.'s Highway Of Tears

    Former UBC Professor, Gets Probation For Secretly Recording People In Change Room

    Former UBC Professor, Gets Probation For Secretly Recording People In Change Room
    RICHMOND, B.C. — A former University of B.C. professor has been handed probation for secretly recording study participants in a change room.

    Former UBC Professor, Gets Probation For Secretly Recording People In Change Room