Burqa ban in Maharashtra class 10, 12 board exams? BJP’s Nitesh Rane writes to govt, cites ‘incidents of cheating’

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Maharashtra Minister Nitesh Rane has written to Maharashtra Education Minister Dada Bhuse requesting that no student should be allowed to enter the 10th and 12th Maharashtra Board examination centres wearing ‘Burqa’.

The BJP leader cited concerns about potential cheating.

Talking to ANI, Maharashtra Minister Nitesh Rane said, “Our government will not tolerate the politics of appeasement. The rules that are applicable to Hindu students, the same should apply to Muslim students as well.”

“Those who want to wear a burqa or hijab can wear it at their homes but at the examination centres, they should write their exams like other students. There have been incidents of cheating and copying in the cases where students were wearing a burqa. All this should not happen in Maharashtra, so I have written a letter to the concerned minister.”, Nitesh Rane informed.

(Mint could not verify the authenticity of the claim that students caught cheating were necessarily wearing burqa)

Burqa Ban in India’s Educational Institutions

Karnataka: In February 2022, the Karnataka government implemented a ban on hijabs in schools and colleges, leading to widespread protests among Muslim students advocating for their right to wear religious attire.

The situation escalated when Hindu students began staging counter-protests, demanding the right to wear saffron scarves, which further complicated the discourse around religious expression in educational settings.

The Karnataka High Court ultimately upheld the ban, ruling that wearing the hijab is not an essential religious practice in Islam, a decision that has drawn criticism both domestically and internationally. However, when the government changed in Karnataka, the Congress downplayed the stricture of the ban on burqa in Karnataka’s educational institutions.

Maharashtra: On August 9, 2024, Supreme Court stayed a Mumbai college’s directive that prohibited students from wearing hijabs, burqas, caps, and naqabs on campus. While the court allowed the ban on burqas and naqabs to remain in place, it highlighted the need for a more nuanced approach to religious attire within educational institutions.

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