CCPR/C/123/D/2807/2016
Annex IV
Individual opinion of Committee member José Manuel Santos Pais
(dissenting)
1.
I regret not being able to share the conclusion, reached by the majority of the
Committee, that the State party violated the author’s rights under articles 18 and 26 of the
Covenant.
2.
Communications Nos. 2747/2016 and 2807/2016 concern the use of the niqab and are
the first of their kind to be considered by the Committee. The issue is a very sensitive one
and a solution should therefore be reached thoughtfully, due to its far-reaching implications.
3.
Significantly enough, the two complaints do not concern an Islamic State, but a
European one with a strong democratic tradition and an impressive human rights record.
Possible solutions are dilemmatic, since persuasive arguments can be invoked both for and
against finding a violation of certain rights. Decisions in both cases will have, apart from the
underlying legal issues, a significant political impact, not only for France, but for many other
countries in Europe, Africa and Asia, where the problem of the use of the niqab may also
arise. The question was thus to find a solution that minimized the harm, while taking into
account all the relevant factors and preventing the risk of any unwarranted and abusive
interpretation of the Committee’s decision.
4.
I tend to consider the complaints in both cases as mostly artificial, using the argument
of a restriction of freedom of thought, conscience and religion as a means to address what is
foremost a political problem. The authors never explain which religious prescriptions impose
the use of the niqab on them or which part of the Qur’an they base their conclusions on. Yet
they acknowledge that wearing the niqab or the burka amounts to wearing a garment that is
customary for a segment of the Muslim faithful and is an act motivated by religious beliefs.
Therefore, it concerns the observance and practice of a religion, notwithstanding the fact that
wearing the niqab or the burka is not a religious requirement common to all practising
Muslims (para. 3.2). We are therefore facing a religious custom, not an undisputed religious
obligation.
5.
The Committee has in the past refused to accept as violations of the provisions of the
Covenant certain social or religious customs and practices that run counter to human rights
(female genital mutilation, honour and ritual killings, attacks against persons with albinism
and many others). Therefore, the fact that the authors invoke a violation of their religious
beliefs does not necessarily lead to the conclusion that their rights have been violated.
6.
Both authors are nationals of France born and domiciled in France. Yet, they refuse
to abide by the prevalent legislation of the State party concerned, although they acknowledge
that they belong to a minority of Muslim women who wear the full-face veil. According to a
parliamentary commission that studied the matter, fewer than 2,000 women are concerned
(paras. 3.3 and 3.14), which constitutes a tiny minority (para. 3.9). They consider that such a
tiny minority can impose their beliefs on the rest of the population, but do not wish to
acknowledge the same right to the rest of the population, which, in terms of a proportionality
test, seems quite disturbing, especially as both authors can use, still within the observance of
their religious beliefs, other less rigorous and extreme forms of dressing, such as a headscarf.
This extreme and radical form of religious belief should, in my view, be considered with
caution so as to allow the Committee to reach a fair and reasonable decision, which
unfortunately, in the present case, did not occur.
7.
When one encounters a given society, the need for respecting its habits and customs
should be a natural concern, as well as respect for social predominant values. Even more so,
when one has a standing relationship with such a society, as is the case for both authors. Yet
the authors refuse to accept this.
8.
It falls within the legitimate powers of each State to democratically define the
legislative framework of their societies, while respecting their international obligations. The
State party has carefully done so. Act No. 2010-1192 was passed unanimously (bar one vote)
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