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Radio France Internationale
Radio France Internationale
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RFI

UN reacts after France bans hijab for its athletes at Paris Olympics

A female footballer wearing a Muslim headscarf (illustration) © AFP - Géraldine Woessner

The UN has issued a strong statement saying that it is opposed to most dress codes for women in any circumstances after France barred its Olympic athletes from wearing the hijab at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games

"No-one should impose on a woman what she needs to wear or not wear," United Nations Rights Office spokeswoman Marta Hurtado told reporters in Geneva.

Hurtado's comment came after the French sports minister said the country's athletes would be barred from wearing headscarves during the Olympic Games, in line with the country's rules on secularism.

French Sports Minister Amelie Oudea-Castera repeated on Sunday that the government was opposed to "any display of religious symbols during sporting events".

"What does that mean? That means a ban on any type of proselytising. That means absolute neutrality in public services," she told France 3 television.

"The France team will not wear the headscarf."

Hurtado did not address France's stance directly.

'Secular values'

However, Hurtado stressed that the 1979 international Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women ruled out discriminatory practices.

"Any state party to the convention has an obligation to modify social or cultural patterns which are based on the idea of the inferiority or superiority of either sexes," Hurtado said.

"Discriminatory practices against a group can have harmful consequences," she pointed out.

"That is why restrictions on expressions of religions or beliefs, such as attire choices, are only acceptable under really specific circumstances," she explained.

That, she said, meant circumstances "that address legitimate concerns of public safety, public order, or public health or morals in a necessary and proportionate fashion".

France's laws prohibit the wearing of "ostentatious" religious symbols in some contexts, such as in state schools and by civil servants, in the name of secularism.

Full-face coverings were outlawed in 2010.

In June, France's Council of State upheld a ban on women footballers wearing the hijab.

(with AFP)

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