A BRITISH Airways employee who
claimed she suffered discrimination at work because of her faith has won
a landmark legal battle at the European Court of Human Rights.
Nadia Eweida, 60, took the airline to a tribunal after she was
forced out of her job for wearing a cross in breach of company uniform
codes.
Her case was rejected in Britain but on Tuesday European
judges found in her favour.
They ruled against three more Christians who
launched similar action.
Ms Eweida, from Twickenham, southwest
London, was sent home in September 2006 for displaying a small silver
cross on a chain around her neck which she wore as a personal expression
of her faith.
She took British Airways to a tribunal but a panel
rejected her claims and ruled she was not a victim of religious
discrimination.
The decision was upheld by The Court of Appeal and
the Supreme Court before Miss Eweida took her fight to the European
Court of Human Rights (ECHR).
She returned to work in customer services at Heathrow Airport's
Terminal 5 in February 2007, after BA changed its uniform policy on
visible items of jewellery.
At the ECHR, Ms Eweida argued BA's
action contravened articles nine and 14 of the European Convention on
Human Rights which prohibit religious discrimination and allow "freedom
of thought, conscience and religion".
Lawyers for the government, which contested the claim, argued her rights were only protected in private.
But judges on Tuesday ruled there had been a violation of article nine (freedom of religion), by five votes to two.
The
judgment, published in Strasbourg, found a fair balance was not struck
between Ms Eweida's desire to demonstrate her religious belief and BA's
wish to "project a certain corporate image".
It found the airline's aim was "undoubtedly legitimate" but said domestic courts accorded it "too much weight".
It concluded: "Ms Eweida's cross was discreet and cannot have detracted from her professional appearance.
"There
was no evidence that the wearing of other, previously authorised, items
of religious clothing, such as turbans and hijabs, by other employees
had any negative impact on British Airways' brand or image.
"Moreover,
the fact that the company was able to amend the uniform code to allow
for the visible wearing of religious symbolic jewellery demonstrates
that the earlier prohibition was not of crucial importance.
"The
court therefore concludes that, in these circumstances where there is no
evidence of any real encroachment on the interests of others, the
domestic authorities failed sufficiently to protect the first
applicant's right to manifest her religion."
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