Dhaka, March 04: Bangladesh’s High Court has ordered police in the Muslim-majority country to stop harassing women who choose not to wear the full-face veil, lawyers said Wednesday.
The order was in response to police officers in the northern town of Rangpur who on Monday detained nine teenage couples found in ‘compromising positions’ at a local zoo and allegedly ordered the girls to wear the burqa or niqab.
Wearing the veil is not mandatory in Bangladesh and the police action drew loud protests from women’s rights groups, prompting lawyers to apply to the High Court for a ruling on the issue.
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‘The High Court ordered late Tuesday that if a girl or a woman does not wear a burqa, she cannot be harassed or humiliated by anyone,’ lawyer Mahbub Shafiq, one of the petitioners, told AFP.
Deputy attorney general Rajik Al Jalil confirmed the ruling, saying: ‘A girl can only be arrested if there is a criminal case against her, not because of what she is wearing.’
A full investigation into the incident has been ordered by the court.
Bangladesh has the world’s fourth-largest Muslim population. Islam is the state religion although only a small but visible minority of the country’s women wears the burqa.
Rangpur police chief Saleh Tanvir denied that police had ordered girls to wear the burqa.
‘We picked up nine couples as they were found in compromising positions. We took action after we received numerous complaints from people that they couldn’t take their families to the zoo because of these couples,’ Tanvir said.
He added that the couples had been released to their parents or guardians.
–Agencies–