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Swiss court rules against employer for firing woman over headscarf

A Serbian woman wins a battle against her former employer who fired her for starting to wear a Muslim headscarf to work
Women hold signs reading 'Is it not a provocation, just my freedom of conscience' during a 'headscarf march' in Switzerland (AFP)
A Swiss court has ruled against a company that fired a longtime employee after she began wearing the Muslim headscarf, marking one of the first such rulings in Switzerland, media reported on Sunday.
 
A regional court in Bern ruled last month that a 29-year-old Serbian woman was fired without just cause from a dry-cleaning business, and ordered the company to give her back-pay and damages, the Le Matin Dimanche weekly reported.
 
The woman, identified only as Abida, was fired in January 2015 from a job she had held for six years, after she began wearing the Muslim headscarf, it reported.
 
Her employer in Bern had told her the headscarf violated hygiene rules, and told her to remove it or be let go.
 
She reportedly offered to wash her headscarf daily or wear disposable headscarves, but her employer refused.
 
The Bern court ruled that the company had violated her constitutional right to freedom of expression, according to the paper.
 
It said wearing a headscarf can only be grounds for termination in cases where it makes it impossible to carry out duties described in the employment contract or if it "substantially affects" the working environment.
 
The case is one of the first of its kind in Switzerland, Le Matin Dimanche said, pointing to only one other known case dating back to 1990, when a machine manufacturer in the east of the country was also faulted for firing a woman for wearing a headscarf.
 
The ruling was hailed by several Muslim groups.
 
"It shouldn't matter if a woman wears a headscarf or a man wears the Jewish kippa. At work, competence should be the criteria and not the clothes that you wear," Onder Gunes of the Federation of Islamic Organisations in Switzerland told the paper.

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