Please Wait...

Loyal to the Pledge

ASU Police Sued Over Forcible Hijab Removal

ASU Police Sued Over Forcible Hijab Removal
folder_openUnited States access_time 5 hours ago
starAdd to favorites

By Staff, Agencies

Four women who took part in the student encampment for Gaza at Arizona State University [ASU] in April of last year are now suing the campus police department, among other individuals, for forcibly removing their hijabs and keeping them off for more than 24 hours after they were arrested.

The news was first reported by The Arizona Republic on Tuesday, citing court documents filed in July. 

ASU police, acting under the orders of the Maricopa County Sheriff's Office, were told to remove the hijabs of those who were arrested when the encampment was raided early in the morning on 26 April 2024 and broken up, the documents showed.

Dozens of protesters were charged with criminal trespass and booked into jail that evening.

Among them were the four hijab-wearers who were then forced to travel to the jail without any form of a head covering: Fatima Jabardi, Noor Odeh, Noura Abdalla and Salam Jabaieh. 

The documents filed said they all continue to suffer "mental anguish, physical and emotional distress, humiliation and embarrassment" from being exposed during their arrest, and for more than 24 hours after that until they were released from jail.

“At no time were Plaintiffs violent, disruptive or dangerous,” the documents filed said. “At no time did Plaintiffs assault, harass or otherwise intimidate anyone.”

It has long been considered a violation of US religious and civic rights to compel women in hijabs to remove them in front of male strangers.

“This is not about a trespass. This is about speech,” said David Chami, the attorney representing the women, as cited by AZFamily, the CBS News affiliate in the state capital Phoenix.

“There was absolutely no justification for stripping those women of their religious head coverings,” he added. 

The Arizona Republic noted that the Maricopa County Sheriff's Office is meant to provide "reasonable accommodations" to people in custody, per its own policy, which states that removal of a religious head covering "shall last only as long as is reasonable, under the totality of circumstances". 

Booking photos are standard after arrest, but forcing hijabi women to remove their headscarves contradicts common ID practices and violates religious norms, as one woman in St. Paul shared.

Hijab removals by police in the US are not infrequent - they have taken place in recent years in New York, California and Arizona, among other states. Most cases have been privately settled.

Comments