RCMP admits hijab to official uniform

The Canadian force made the official amendment earlier this year but opted to do so quietly.

As tensions continue to escalate over religious attire, the RCMP has made its stance clear – officially introducing the hijab to its standard uniform policy.

The change – which was privately introduced earlier this year – brings the RCMP’s protocol in line with Toronto Police and Edmonton Police – both of which have already approved hijabs.

"This is intended to better reflect the diversity in our communities and encourage more Muslim women to consider the Royal Canadian Mounted Police as a career option," a spokesman for Canada's Public Safety Minister told the newswire service Agence France-Presse.

Staff Sgt. Julie Gagnon, a spokeswoman for the force, said the RCMP has already developed a specialty hijab for its female members.

“The RCMP-issued hijab has undergone rigorous testing to ensure the design meets the highest standards of officer safety,” she said in a statement.

The move is in stark contrast a number of nations in Europe where officials have begun proposing and implementing measures which restrict the use of religious attire.

In France, a woman was recently fined and forced to remove her “burkini” while on a public beach and Germany recently proposed a burka ban for all schools, universities and public workers.

However, Police Scotland confirmed they had added the burka to their official uniform policy earlier this week and the London Metropolitan Police have included the headscarf for over a decade.

Recent stories:

Sobeys backtracks after boycott threats 

Shock report on the cost of motherhood 

Two worker deaths at iPhone maker in two days 
 

Recent articles & video

Diabetes meds still leading drug category for eligible private insurance claims: report

Recruitment of temporary foreign workers surges in Q4

$850,000 fine against company and owner/director signals increased risk under OHSA

Most workers confident they can find a new job in 6 months – so what’s holding them back?

Most Read Articles

Province confirms minimum wage increases for 2024

Alberta launches new compensation model for doctors

Grocery store faces criticism after 2 teen workers poisoned at work