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Wednesday, March 5, 2025

Court rules prison beard policy unconstitutional

... Commissioner’s legal team also concedes promotion block unreasonable

by

378 days ago
20240221

Se­nior Re­porter

derek.achong@guardian.co.tt

A T&T Prison Ser­vice pol­i­cy bar­ring Mus­lim prison of­fi­cers from keep­ing beards has been deemed un­con­sti­tu­tion­al.

High Court Judge Mar­garet Mo­hammed is­sued the de­c­la­ra­tion yes­ter­day as she up­held a con­sti­tu­tion­al law­suit brought by Ar­shad Singh.

Singh’s vic­to­ry in the case came less than two weeks af­ter an­oth­er High Court Judge dis­missed a some­what dif­fer­ent case over a sim­i­lar pol­i­cy with­in the T&T Po­lice Ser­vice (TTPS).

Ac­cord­ing to the ev­i­dence in the case, Singh ad­mit­ted that he had pre­vi­ous­ly been al­lowed to keep a short beard for se­cu­ri­ty rea­sons but claimed that he wrote to the Prison Ser­vice seek­ing per­mis­sion af­ter it grew longer when he went to per­form Ha­jj in Sau­di Ara­bia.

Singh was due to be pro­mot­ed to the rank of Prison Of­fi­cer II but was re­moved from a pro­mo­tion cer­e­mo­ny in Sep­tem­ber 2022 af­ter act­ing Pris­ons Com­mis­sion­er De­op­er­sad Ra­moutar saw his beard and ques­tioned him about it.

Singh filed two cas­es over what tran­spired and ob­tained an in­junc­tion block­ing dis­ci­pli­nary ac­tion for his beard un­til they (the cas­es) were de­ter­mined.

One case chal­lenged his failed pro­mo­tion, while the oth­er claimed that the beard pol­i­cy breached Singh’s con­sti­tu­tion­al right to free­dom of con­science, re­li­gious be­lief and ob­ser­vance.

At the end of the tri­al be­fore Jus­tice Mo­hammed, Ra­moutar’s le­gal team con­ced­ed that his de­ci­sion to block Singh’s pro­mo­tion was un­rea­son­able.

Jus­tice Mo­hammed did not de­ter­mine the ap­pro­pri­ate com­pen­sa­tion for Singh in the pro­mo­tion case as she re­ferred such an as­sess­ment to a High Court Mas­ter.

In his con­sti­tu­tion­al claim, Singh pre­sent­ed the ex­pert ev­i­dence of Maulana Ab­dul Salam, of Darul Uloom T&T, who tes­ti­fied that keep­ing a beard and al­low­ing it to grow is es­sen­tial for Mus­lim men.

In de­fence of the case, State at­tor­neys claimed that the pol­i­cy, found in Gen­er­al Or­ders for the ser­vice, is in­tend­ed to en­sure uni­for­mi­ty, in­stil dis­ci­pline, and en­sure tidi­ness and clean­li­ness.

Ra­moutar ad­mit­ted that some of­fi­cers were giv­en ex­emp­tions on med­ical grounds and for se­cu­ri­ty rea­sons.

In her judg­ment, Jus­tice Mo­hammed stat­ed that Ra­moutar’s jus­ti­fi­ca­tion for the pol­i­cy was un­der­mined by the ex­emp­tions grant­ed and a lack of ev­i­dence to jus­ti­fy it.

Ad­mit­ting that poli­cies and pro­ce­dures to in­stil dis­ci­pline are laud­able, Jus­tice Mo­hammed said: “How­ev­er, those poli­cies and pro­ce­dures can­not lim­it or re­strict any prison of­fi­cer in­clud­ing the claimant’s guar­an­teed right to prac­tice and ob­serve one’s re­li­gion and be­lief, as the Con­sti­tu­tion is the supreme law in T&T.

“In my opin­ion, the wear­ing of the hi­jab by a Mus­lim woman po­lice of­fi­cer while on du­ty is no dif­fer­ent from the male Mus­lim prison of­fi­cer wear­ing a beard while on du­ty, as in both in­stances those prac­tices are fun­da­men­tal in their ob­ser­vance of the Is­lam­ic faith,” she added.

Vin­di­ca­to­ry dam­ages

are to be cal­cu­lat­ed

Jus­tice Mo­hammed grant­ed a se­ries of de­c­la­ra­tions against the pol­i­cy but al­so ruled that Singh should re­ceive vin­di­ca­to­ry dam­ages for breach of his con­sti­tu­tion­al right.

Point­ing out that in the case Ra­moutar main­tained that the ser­vice does not dis­crim­i­nate based on re­li­gion for its of­fi­cers and in­mates, Jus­tice Mo­hammed not­ed that the gen­er­al or­ders pre­scrib­ing the pol­i­cy should have been amend­ed with­out the court’s in­ter­ven­tion.

“In my opin­ion, this as­pect of the com­mis­sion­er’s ev­i­dence was a clear demon­stra­tion that he is acute­ly aware of the im­por­tance of not dis­crim­i­nat­ing on re­li­gious grounds, but his ac­tions were the in­ten­tion­al ap­pli­ca­tion of gen­er­al or­ders which by their very na­ture are dis­crim­i­nat­ing on re­li­gious grounds,” she said.

The vin­di­ca­to­ry dam­ages are to be cal­cu­lat­ed by the same High Court Mas­ter as­signed to as­sess the dam­ages in the pro­mo­tion case.

Ear­ly last year, Mus­lim prison of­fi­cers Sher­win Ram­nar­ine and Javed Boodram ob­tained an in­junc­tion from Jus­tice Mo­hammed over a move to trans­fer them based on their beards.

Based on the out­come of Singh’s case, the duo’s case es­sen­tial­ly be­came aca­d­e­m­ic with Jus­tice Mo­hammed just hav­ing to de­cide whether they are en­ti­tled to com­pen­sa­tion.

On Feb­ru­ary 9, High Court Judge Bet­sy-Ann Lam­bert-Pe­ter­son dis­missed a law­suit on the TTPS beard pol­i­cy brought by PC Kris­t­ian Khan.

In that case, Jus­tice Lam­bert-Pe­ter­son had to con­sid­er whether the pol­i­cy un­der Po­lice Ser­vice Reg­u­la­tions, in­tro­duced in 2007, was im­mune from ju­di­cial chal­lenge based on the con­sti­tu­tion­al sav­ings clause.

Un­der Sec­tion 6 of the Con­sti­tu­tion, leg­is­la­tion which is found to breach cit­i­zens’ fun­da­men­tal rights can­not be chal­lenged if passed be­fore the coun­try’s Con­sti­tu­tion was amend­ed in 1976.

Amend­ments to pre-1976 leg­is­la­tion, such as the reg­u­la­tions, are al­so im­mune pro­vid­ed that they (the amend­ments) dero­gate from fun­da­men­tal rights in the same man­ner as the pre­vi­ous leg­is­la­tion.

Jus­tice Lam­bert-Pe­ter­son ruled that the 2007 amend­ment to the reg­u­la­tions on fa­cial hair mir­rored reg­u­la­tions that were in place in 1965.

“As such, it is an ex­ist­ing law and is pro­tect­ed from hav­ing to sat­is­fy the con­sti­tu­tion­al re­quire­ments in the fun­da­men­tal rights pro­vi­sions in the Con­sti­tu­tion,” she said.

The out­come of Khan’s case came hours af­ter High Court Judge Robin Mo­hammed up­held a con­sti­tu­tion­al chal­lenge to the min­i­mum height re­quire­ment for peo­ple seek­ing en­try in­to the TTPS.

In his judg­ment, Jus­tice Mo­hammed not­ed that the 2007 reg­u­la­tions low­ered the height re­quire­ment for prospec­tive male of­fi­cers by al­most two cen­time­tres and the height re­quire­ment for prospec­tive fe­male of­fi­cers by al­most 13 cen­time­tres.

He said that the change re­sult­ed in the un­jus­ti­fied ex­clu­sion of more male can­di­dates with the same height or taller than fe­male can­di­dates.

Both cas­es are now ex­pect­ed to be con­sid­ered by the Court of Ap­peal.

Singh was rep­re­sent­ed by Sunil Gopaul-Go­sine and Im­ran Khan, while the Of­fice of the At­tor­ney Gen­er­al was rep­re­sent­ed by Coreen Find­ley, Janique Mitchell, Kristyn Lewis and Akee­nie Mur­ray.


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