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Australian Court Overturns Ban On Wearing Kirpan Inside Campus For Sikh Students

Sikhs are required to wear a kirpan as part of their religious uniform as prescribe🎉d by their code of conduct.

Sikhs in UK𒁃 are now allowed to carry Kirpans, after Offensive Weapons Bill was approved by the parliam꧑ent as an act of law.
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Australian Court has overturned a law that banned Sikh students to wear 🃏a kirpan,🦩 a religious article in Sikhism, on campus.

A court in Australia’s Queensland state has overturned a law that banned Sikꩲh students to wear a kirpan, a religious article in Sikhism, on campus, calling the legislation “unconstitutional”, reported PTI.

“The ruling by the state’s highest court came after Kamaljit Kaur Athwal took the state government to court last year, claiming that th🅘e ban discriminated against the kirpan — one of five religious symbols that Sikhs are supposed to carry at all times as part of their fai꧙th,” the report said.

Sikhs are required to wear a kirpan as part of their religious uniform as prescribed by their code of conduct. 
It’s one of five religious symbols they carry🦩 at all times as p🃏art of their faith.

The Queensland S🔴upreme Court on 🀅Thursday ruled that “the ban is unconstitutional under the Racial Discrimination Act (RDA),” it said.

A🦩n initial court ruling dismissed the claim the act was discriminatory but now after an appeal, there has been a win for the Sikh faith, it added.

Bill Potts from Potts Lawyers Queensland said the original legislation meant Sikhs “were not able to go to school, not able to go to effectively carry ꦐout their religion”, it said.

It added P﷽otts said the overturning of the law is giving freedom back to those practising the faith and is a “great step forward”.

“This just simply means that they have the same freedoms that everybody else has and are not discriminated against byꦍ the state legislation,” the report quoted Potts as having said.

“Carrying a kirpan as a symbol of a religious commitment would, at least ordinarily, constitute a usไe of the knife for a lawful purpose – namely, religious observance,” the report quoted the court statement. 

“To say that both Sikhs and non-Sikhs cannot practice their religion while wearing a knife ignores the fact that carrying a knife is only a feature of the religious observance🌊 of Sikhs,”it said. 

“A law which prohibits a person from carrying a knife in a school for religious purposes impacts Sikhs by preventing them from lawfully entering schools while adhering to their religious beliefs,”it added.