Das Oberhaus des tadschikischen Parlaments, das Majlisi Milli, hat am 19. Juni einen Gesetzentwurf verabschiedet, der verbietet "Alien-Kleidung" und Kinderfeiern zu zwei großen islamischen Feiertagen – Eid al-Fitr und Eid Al-Adha, bekannt als Idgardak. Der Gesetzentwurf, der am 8. Mai von der Unterkammer, dem Majlisi Namoyandagon, verabschiedet wurde, zielt hauptsächlich auf den Hijab, das islamische Kopftuch, und andere traditionelle islamische Kleidungsstücke ab, die in den letzten Jahren aus dem Nahen Osten in das zentralasiatische Land gelangten und von den Behörden mit islamischen Extremisten in Verbindung gebracht wurden. Der Gesetzentwurf löste Kontroversen unter der überwiegend muslimischen Bevölkerung der streng kontrollierten ehemaligen Sowjetrepublik aus, die an Afghanistan grenzt.

Warum haben wir es noch nicht verboten? Sie grenzen an Tadschikistan und wir an den Iran.

https://www.rferl.org/a/tajik-parliament-upper-chamber-approves-bill-banning-hijab/32999679.html

Von datashrimp29

11 Comments

  1. CalmEquivalent9302 on

    So, you are saying that government should decide women’s clothing? Aren’t you guys the same ones who condemn muslim countries for making women wear hijab?

  2. Here is a summary of the post:

    “Hello my fellow Azeris who are surely not American neckbeards! Me an Azeri (Not an American neckbeard btw) is happy that a country that was forced to leave Islam, is still forced to leave Islam! We need to implement this in our country, The ~~US..~~ I mean Azerbaijan, yeah!”

    Reddit is a funny place.

  3. Flashy-Swimming4107 on

    Tajikistan is one of the most islamist and terrorist producing countries in this world. You shouldn’t compare Azerbaijan with Tajikistan

  4. NotSamuraiJosh26_2 on

    I looked it up and apparently the country already had an anti-hijab law that wasn’t enforced at all.So how different is it going to be now ?

  5. Wolfashina on

    Interesting. I’m going to be honest I despise many parts of Islam and in theory I’m incredibly anti religious state (example, iran) however I feel like this bill is a little much. Where do you draw the line? I’m in full support of banning the niqab or burqa because I believe it’s a dehumanizing garment that was created based on extremist principles. I can understand niqab and burqa ban. But hijab ban??

    I think this will do more harm than good. For multiple reasons. This will anger extremists, making them even more polarized and hostile. It’s also… I suppose.. strange? The article says it bans Islamic hijab. What does that entail exactly? Lots of people wear head coverings for different reasons. I am not Muslim, but I wear a headscarf often. Sometimes I use it to tie back my hair because I work a busy job. Sometimes it’s a fashion thing. Sometimes it’s cultural, I wear it more when I’m in certain parts of Istanbul and want to look more traditional. Sometimes it’s genuinely because I want to look modest as I am somewhat religious (not strictly Muslim, just a believe in God) and sometimes it feels good to look the part. When is it a hijab and when is it not a hijab? To people, when are they able to tell the difference?

    I think this will do more harm than good. Again, not a fan of Islam but even someone who does not agree with Islam can admit this is encroaching on peoples personal freedom. If someone wants to wear a headscarf, that’s their personal choice and I have no right to tell them no. I also believe this is a slippery slope. Sorry for the rant, I had a lot to say.

  6. susamcocuk on

    I don’t think secularism means banning religious holidays. If so, North Korea and China are the most secular countries in the world.

    No one knows the content and meaning of Secularism. However, Secularism means respecting the religion of every citizen in the country and approaching it impartially and separating religion and state affairs.

    Azerbaijan, on the other hand, is a very secular country, except for the Mullah sects so-called opened by Iran.

  7. senolgunes on

    They should focus on education instead of banning things. The coups in Turkey introduced many bans like this in the name of secularism, but it just paved the way for political Islam and Erdogan instead.

  8. Own-Homework-1363 on

    lol you guys don’t even need it, most your girls don’t care to cover.

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