Posted in ICHRA

‘If a Sikh passenger is allowed to wear a Kirpan in the aircraft as provided for by the Indian Constitution, it is hard to accept why a Sikh employee should be banned from wearing a Kirpan at the airside for security reasons when he would have undergone greater security checks,‘ says Mejindarpal Kaur, Legal Director of UNITED SIKHS.

“Staff employed at UK airports, including those working airside, are permitted to wear articles of faith while on duty”: UK Equality and Human Rights Commission Guidance on wearing Sikh Articles of Faith.

“Non- Sikh security staff do carry weapons near aircraft. Why are they not considered a security threat compared to Kirpan-wearing Sikh security staff?” questioned Nirmal Singh, an Air India security staff at Amritsar airport who was stopped from working at the airside because he wears a Kirpan.

Amritsar, Panjab – UNITED SIKHS has called on the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF), that provides security at all Indian airports, to revoke the ban on employees wearing a Kirpan at the airside at the Sri Guru Ramdas International Airport, Amritsar, because it violates their religious rights.

UNITED SIKHS wrote on Friday to the Director General of CISF, N.R. Dass, to ask him revoke the ban that was enforced on 25th April 2011 at the Amritsar airport against all Kirpan wearing Sikhs who work at the airside.

According to a Times of India report on Thursday, commandant Sharad Kumar  said that CISF, on security grounds,  had  banned Nirmal Singh (and other 18 Kirpan wearing Sikh employees working at the airside of  the Amritsar Airport) from wearing a Kirpan, which, an Amritdhari Sikh is mandated to wear at all times.

Nirmal Singh, 37, an Air India security staff who has been wearing the Kirpan whilst working at the Amritsar airport since 2001, told UNITED SIKHS, “There is no such ban at any other Indian airport and this ban at the Amritsar airport is unfair because it singles out Sikh employees as a security concern.”

 “The Sikh community shares the public’s concern with national security, however, the ban of the Kirpan for airside employees at Amritsar airport is discriminatory because no such security threat is suspected for non Sikh airside security staff  who carry weapons near the aircraft,” said Mejindarpal Kaur, UNITED SIKHS legal director.

“Further, we cannot accept an abrogation of a Sikh’s constitutional right under article 25 (2) (b) of the Indian constitution, under which a Sikh has a right to wear a Kirpan at all times,” said Mejindarpal Kaur.

This right is reflected in the Ministry of Civil Aviation’s Circular no.8/99 dated 28.4.99 (annexure-II), which allows Sikh passengers to carry a Kirpan with them on board domestic flights.

Further, in the UK, Sikh airport employees are permitted to wear the Kirpan at the airside. Heathrow airport, a highly security sensitive airport, allows Sikhs their religious right to wear the Kirpan.  See page 20 of the Guidance for wearing the Kirpan  issued by the Equality and Human Rights Commission of the UK at http://www.equalityhumanrights.com/uploaded_files/publications/sikh_articles_of_faith_guidance_final.pdf

“The statistics too do not favour CISF’s decision to ban the Kirpan. There are about 100 Kirpan wearing Sikhs who work at the airside of the Heathrow airport. However, there are only some 19 Kirpan wearing Sikhs who work at the airside at the Amritsar airport, Mejindarpal Kaur added.

You may read a previous press release on UNITED SIKHS’ advocacy for the wearing of Sikh articles of faith at https://www.unitedsikhs.org/PressReleases/PRSRLS-17-04-2011-00.html

Issued by:
Daljit Singh
Director
UNITED SIKHS
+91 9779957973Law-global@unitedsikhs.org

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