Georgia’s Ministry of Education has said it’s unfortunate a dispute over a teenager being prohibited from wearing a hijab to school has been interpreted as a restriction of religious freedom.
In a statement provided to OC Media, the ministry said the school’s rules applied to any kind of head covering, and were drafted through consultations with parents, teachers, and students.
‘The ministry calls on everyone to abstain from discussing this issue in a religious point of view and assist to peaceful resolution of the issue’, says the statement.
The ministry declined to comment further, saying the issue will be studied by specialists.
The 14-year-old girl from the village of Karajala, in eastern Georgia, has been told she must remove her hijab while at school. While the headteacher of the school insists the covering is prohibited under school rules, the teenager’s family says she is being deprived of the right to religious freedom.
The headteacher claims the teenager is being forced by her parents to obey religious rules that prevent her from receiving a quality education.
This is not the first controversy over the wearing of the hijab in Georgian schools. In December, 18-year-old Teona Beridze from the village of Mokhe, in southwest Georgia’s Adigeni Municipality, was asked by her school’s headteacher to remove her hijab at school. The ministry found that the headteacher’s actions did not violate any rules.
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On Friday, Ilia State University reported that the Authorisation Council for Higher Education Institutions had granted them authorisation ‘with the condition of monitoring after a year’.
According to the university, this decision was made despite having received positive
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On Friday, the Russian state-owned news agency published a report about the decision citing anonymous teachers and education specialists.
The report was misinterpreted by some online who thought the government was completely removing Russian language fro
A lecturer at the Yerevan State University (YSU) has accused the university of firing him and others for participating in opposition protests.
On Monday, Abraham Gasparyan, a lecturer at the university’s International Relations faculty, said YSU had fired him over his political stances calling his dismissal ‘baseless, ignorant, and undignified’.
Gasparyan, who also hosts a show on opposition-leaning ABC Media, claimed that around ten of his colleagues had been fired for similar reasons and
A proposal to change the name of a school subject, Armenian History, to the History of Armenia has stirred controversy in the country, despite government reassurances that the curriculum would remain unchanged.
During a meeting of the ruling Civil Contract party last week, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan stated that a group of teachers and scientists had appealed to the Ministry of Education to change the subject’s name.
Pashinyan stated that he agreed with the proposal, adding that he ‘blame