- Quebec’s New Bill 9 Sparks Alarm Over Sweeping Restrictions on . . .
Quebec’s New Bill 9 Sparks Alarm Over Sweeping Restrictions on Religious Freedoms The bill would ban outdoor group prayers, prohibit religious symbols such as the hijab in daycares, colleges, and universities, shut down institutional prayer rooms, heavily restrict religious dietary accommodations such as halal meals, and remove public funding from private religious schools
- Quebecs new secularism bill targets daycare workers, prayer spaces and . . .
The Quebec government wants to place limits on praying in public and extend a ban on wearing religious symbols to daycare workers as part of a sweeping new secularism bill tabled Thursday
- Five things to know about the Quebec government’s new secularism bill
The bill would ban religious symbols, including hijabs and turbans, for people working in daycares, colleges and universities It would also ban full face coverings, including the niqab, for
- Quebec to extend religious symbols ban, outlaw university prayer rooms . . .
The Quebec government says it is planning to ban prayer in public places as part of a move to strengthen secularism in the province
- Quebec to extend religious symbols ban in new bill - CTV News
In 2019, Bill 21 banned such symbols, including hijabs and turbans, for public sector employees in positions of authority, such as teachers, police officers and judges
- Quebec moves to expand secularism law, limit public prayer - BBC
Quebec Premier Francois Legault's government has passed a number of secularism laws in the Canadian province The Canadian province of Quebec plans to impose restrictions on public prayer and limit
- Canadian Muslims outraged as Quebec moves to ban religious symbols at . . .
Canada’s largest Muslim organisation is outraged over a bill introduced by the Quebec government that would ban headscarves for school support staff and students
- Quebec government tables bill banning prayer rooms in public . . .
That law banned religious symbols, including hijabs and turbans, for public sector employees in positions of authority, such as teachers, police officers and judges
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