Salahadin
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IAF cites religion for banning beard for Muslims
Daily Times Monitor
LAHORE: Defending an Indian Air Force (IAF) policy that forbids Muslim personnel recruited after 2002 from keeping a beard, the Indian government has told the Supreme Court that its policies are secular in nature and that only those air force personnel are permitted to grow hair or keep a beard whose religion specifically prohibits cutting hair, Indian Express reported on Sunday.
According to the report, the Indian government said that keeping a beard was not compulsory in Islam. It is submitted that all Muslims do not keep a beard. The practice of growing and keeping a beard is optional and sporting a beard is not universally recognised in the religion of Islam, the government said in a reply.
The governments response was to an appeal by Aircraftsman Ansari Aftab Ahmad, who challenged the validity of the IAFs instructions, dated February 24 and April 1, 2003, prohibiting Muslim personnel from growing a beard. The court in September 2008 sought scrutiny of the rule.
The main aim of the policy, which lays down dress and department rules for the air force personnel, is that personnel should be known by the duty that he performs and not by the religion to which he belongs, the Indian government told the apex court. The policy, the IAF stressed, was issued in the interest of cohesiveness in a combatant force like the IAF and also keeping in view the security implications.
All air force personnel, while on duty, are required to wear similar uniform and do not display any sign or object which marks him distinctly from others. In an armed force, it is always intended that to the extent possible, all personnel should look identifiably similar so that they may work in a cohesive, cooperative and coordinate manner, it said.
Apart from Ahmad, another petitioner, Muhammad Zubair, had challenged the IAF policy on similar grounds, but his plea was dismissed.
dailytimes.com.pk
Daily Times Monitor
LAHORE: Defending an Indian Air Force (IAF) policy that forbids Muslim personnel recruited after 2002 from keeping a beard, the Indian government has told the Supreme Court that its policies are secular in nature and that only those air force personnel are permitted to grow hair or keep a beard whose religion specifically prohibits cutting hair, Indian Express reported on Sunday.
According to the report, the Indian government said that keeping a beard was not compulsory in Islam. It is submitted that all Muslims do not keep a beard. The practice of growing and keeping a beard is optional and sporting a beard is not universally recognised in the religion of Islam, the government said in a reply.
The governments response was to an appeal by Aircraftsman Ansari Aftab Ahmad, who challenged the validity of the IAFs instructions, dated February 24 and April 1, 2003, prohibiting Muslim personnel from growing a beard. The court in September 2008 sought scrutiny of the rule.
The main aim of the policy, which lays down dress and department rules for the air force personnel, is that personnel should be known by the duty that he performs and not by the religion to which he belongs, the Indian government told the apex court. The policy, the IAF stressed, was issued in the interest of cohesiveness in a combatant force like the IAF and also keeping in view the security implications.
All air force personnel, while on duty, are required to wear similar uniform and do not display any sign or object which marks him distinctly from others. In an armed force, it is always intended that to the extent possible, all personnel should look identifiably similar so that they may work in a cohesive, cooperative and coordinate manner, it said.
Apart from Ahmad, another petitioner, Muhammad Zubair, had challenged the IAF policy on similar grounds, but his plea was dismissed.
dailytimes.com.pk