Friday, 5 Jul 2024

Quebec religious symbols bill to be challenged in court

A national Muslim organization is joining civil liberties advocates to launch a court challenge of Quebec’s secularism law, less than 24 hours after the legislation was adopted.

The National Council of Canadian Muslims and the Canadian Civil Liberties Association announced their challenge Monday.

Representatives say they’ll unveil their legal strategy at a news conference at 2 p.m. in Montreal.

The Coalition Avenir Quebec (CAQ) government used its majority to push Bill 21 through by a vote of 73 to 35 Sunday night after invoking closure to end debate on the bill.

Quebec’s new law prohibits public workers in positions of authority from wearing religious symbols on the job.

The law applies to teachers, police officers, judges, prosecutors and others.

The National Council of Canadian Muslims says one of the plaintiffs in the court challenge is a Muslim university student in Quebec who wears a hijab and is studying to work in a field affected by the new law.

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It pointed to last-minute additions to the law, including a special agency that would enforce the law, which the opposition calls the “secularism police.”

“Let me tell you, whenever anybody starts talking about surveying a workplace, I think that’s when you should start getting worried,” said Mustafa Farooq, the council’s executive director.

Rugia Malek, a first-year materials engineering student at McGill University, and a Muslim from Sudan told Global News while she plans on remaining in Canada after graduation, she won’t be staying in Quebec.

According to the Quebec Community Groups Network (QCGN) the the law could have long-term ramifications.

“It’s just a mess that they didn’t need to impose upon us, and one we’re going to have to figure out over the next several years,” said Geoffrey Chambers, the organization’s president.

Immigration Minister Simon Jolin-Barrette, who tabled the bill, told reporters Monday he is not worried about the court challenge because the legislation invokes the notwithstanding clause of the Canadian Constitution.

This clause prevents people from challenging a law for human rights violations.

— with files from Global’s Billy Shields.

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