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Austrian government presses ahead with planned headscarf ban in schools

By Thomson Reuters Dec 9, 2025 | 9:06 AM

VIENNA, Dec 9 (Reuters) – Austria’s governing coalition said on Tuesday it plans to pass a ban on headscarves in schools for girls under 14 despite criticism from rights groups ‍and the possibility that it will be overturned by the Constitutional Court.

The conservative-led government took office in March after the far-right Freedom Party (FPO) came first in last year’s parliamentary election with around 29% of the vote but could not find a coalition partner to govern with.

The coalition ‌of three centrist parties has made fighting illegal ‌immigration a central pillar of its programme, a move that critics say fuels anti-Muslim sentiment.

The lower house is due this week to discuss the legislation that would introduce the ban.

“It is not a measure against ​a religion. It is a measure to protect the freedom of girls in this country,” Yannick Shetty, the parliamentary leader of ‍the liberal Neos party, told a ​joint press conference with his counterparts from the two ​other government parties.

The ban would affect up to 12,000 children, he ‍said.

The Islamic Religious Community in Austria, the body that formally represents the country’s Muslims, has rejected a ban as infringing on fundamental rights.

The FPO has called the proposed ban a “first step” that should then be widened to include all pupils and school ‍staff.

Amnesty International said in a statement that passing the law in its current form “will not empower girls – on the contrary, it will add to ‍the current racist ‍climate towards Muslims.”

The Constitutional Court struck down a ​similar ban for girls under 10 in 2020 ​because it ⁠targeted Muslims. Going against the principle that the ‌state must be religiously neutral would require a special justification, the court ruled at the time.

The government says it has tried to avoid the same outcome.

“Will it pass muster with the Constitutional Court? I don’t know. We have done our best,” Shetty said.

(Reporting by Francois Murphy, Editing ⁠by Timothy Heritage)