Bengaluru: As a school in Karnataka reopened for grade 10 in the middle of the hijab line, the Interior Minister Araga Jnanendra on Wednesday told that the overall situation of peace, except for some incidents reported from alleged student rejection with the hijab and burqa schools.
Speaking with Ani, Jnanendra said, “The overall situation of peace.
Some incidents were reported (alleged rejection of entry for female students to schools with headscarves and burqa).
Everywhere students wear headscarves and release them when entering campus.” Furthermore, the Minister of Home Karnataka said that the state government followed the temporary commandments passed by the High Court.
“If anyone violates the order, the action will be taken according to the law,” he said.
Meanwhile, training orders under Section 144 have been applied in the basics of pre-university and college colleges in the Udupi district.
Allegedly, some students were asked to sit in a separate room because they refused to appear for the exam without wearing his headscarves in the cities of Shivogga and Udupi in the state.
Some Karnataka Public School students in Nellihudikeri in the Kodagu district protested against the prohibition of headscarves.
Parents who stood outside the school told that the school government also asked students to appear for the exam without a headscarf.
The hijab protest in Karnataka began in January this year when several students of the PU College government girl in the Udupi Regency district accused that they had been banned from attending classes.
During protests, some students claimed they were refused to enter the campus because they were wearing a headscarf.
Following this incident, students from various colleges arrived at Shanteshwar Education Trust at Vijayapura wearing a turmeric pool.
The situation is the same in several universities in the Udupi district.
The pre-university education council has released a circle stating that students can only wear uniforms approved by school administration and no other religious practices that will be permitted in universities.
Meanwhile, the Karnataka High Court also begged the students of the students and the wider community to maintain peace and tranquility while hearing various requests challenging the prohibition of headscarves in the state.
Senior Advocate Devadatt Kamat, appeared for the Petitioner, on Monday, told the Karnataka High Court who handed it to the college committee to decide whether the hijab was allowed or not entirely illegal.