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Third
Singapore Schoolgirl Suspended Over Scarf

Singapore - A
third girl has been suspended from school in Singapore in a growing
row over a ban on the wearing of Islamic headscarves.
Khairah Faroukh's father Khairah
Faroukh, aged six, flouted a deadline to comply with school rules
barring headscarves, or tudungs as they are known in the region, and
had to leave the school minutes after entering the compound.
"She has been forced to be
suspended. I will be consistent with religion. This is my
responsibility as a father," her father Faroukh Dawood said,
adding that the school gave them until Thursday to change their mind.
Last week two other Muslim girls were
suspended for wearing headscarves to class, and another girl stopped
going to school after being told to comply with the ban.
International criticism
The row has widened with groups in
several neighbouring countries, which have criticised the Singaporean
Government's policy of imposing strict uniform codes, which it says
helps to maintain racial harmony.
Brunei's only legal political party,
the National Solidarity Party (PPKB) said that religious dress did not
promote social unrest.
"Religious attires do not
contribute to social disharmony and disunity and the wearing of
headscarves definitely does not contribute to social
disintegration," PPKB President Mohd Hatta Zainal Abidin said in
a statement.
Headscarves are compulsory for
Brunei's Muslim schoolgirls but not for non-Muslims. Islam is Brunei's
official religion.
In Malaysia, several political
parties have made similar comments. The spiritual leader of the main
Muslim opposition party PAS, said the policy threatened to erode
freedom of religion in Singapore.
Race relations
However, Singapore's top Islamic
figures have urged the parents of suspended girls to end the standoff
with the authorities.
Singapore's Mufti, Syed Isa Semait,
said last week that "the no-tudung rule lasts only for a few
hours when the pupils are in school".
"Education is more
important," he said.
The Islamic Religious Council of
Singapore (MUIS) also said the parents should send their girls back to
school.
Correspondents say the sensitive
issue is testing community cohesion in Singapore, where race relations
have come to the fore since the arrests in December of more than a
dozen alleged militants suspected of having links with al-Qaeda.
Racial and religious riots broke out
in Singapore in the 1950s and '60s. Since then, government policy has
focused on avoiding racial and religious tensions between the ethnic
Chinese majority and the Malay Muslim minority.
The government says its schools
should provide a common space for pupils of all races, religions and
backgrounds to mix freely.
For devout Malay Muslims, who make up
about 15% of Singapore's population, the tudung is obligatory once
girls reach puberty. But some parents insist their daughters wear them
from an earlier age.
The headscarf ban does not apply
outside schools or to Singapore's private religious schools. But the
suspended girls' parents say all the private schools are full.
Brudirect.com News
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