EU Law’s Half-Hearted Protection of Religious Minorities Minority Specific Rights and Freedom of Religion for All
Abstract
:1. Introduction: Setting the Scene, the Special Issue, This Article
2. Religious Minorities: Definition and Benchmarks of an Adequate Protection (Equality, Identity and Participation)
- [48] The idea underlying the treaties for the protection of minorities is to secure for certain elements incorporated in a State, the population of which differs from them in race, language or religion, the possibility of living peaceably alongside that population and cooperating amicably with it, while at the same time preserving the characteristics which distinguish them from the majority, and satisfying the ensuing special needs.
- [49] In order to attain this object, two things were regarded as particularly necessary, and have formed the subject of provisions in these treaties.
- [50] The first is to ensure that nationals belonging to racial, religious or linguistic minorities shall be placed in every respect on a footing of perfect equality with the other nationals of the State.
- [51] The second is to ensure for the minority elements suitable means for the preservation of their racial peculiarities, their traditions and their national characteristics.
- [52] These two requirements are indeed closely interlocked, for there would be no true equality between a majority and a minority if the latter were deprived of its own institutions, and were consequently compelled to renounce that which constitutes the very essence of its being as a minority.’(Emphasis added.)
3. An Overall Ambiguous Relationship between Religious Minorities and Fundamental Rights
4. The EU and Religious Minorities
4.1. Minorities in the EU Legal Framework
4.2. EU and Religious Minorities: Minority Specific Rights?
4.3. EU and Religious Minorities: General Rights—Freedom of Religion and Non-Discrimination?
4.3.1. Egenberger and IR
4.3.2. Achatzi
4.3.3. Case Concerning the Muslim Minority in Europe
Headscarves at Work: Achbita
Headscarves at Work: Bougnaoui
Ritual Slaughter: Liga van Moskeeën
Ritual Slaughter: OABA (C-497/17)
5. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
1 | This line of thinking goes back to the formula of Aristotle following which like things needed to be treated alike and different things differently, to the extent of the difference. |
2 | During the time of the League of Nations the Minorities treaties included three categories of rights: rights for all per-sons, rights for all nationals and rights for nationals belonging to minorities. |
3 | Article 27 ICCPR reads: In those States in which ethnic, religious or linguistic minorities exist, persons belonging to such minorities shall not be denied the right, in community with the other members of their group, to enjoy their own culture, to profess and practise their own religion, or to use their own language. |
4 | France and Belgium continue to resist ratification of the FCNM. |
5 | Critical discussion of two opposite paradigms regarding judicial law-making, cf. (Jacob 2011, vol. 12, pp. 1005–32). |
6 | The CJEU case law on freedom of religion and discrimination on grounds of religion (Directive 2000/78) is steadily expanding. The article was submitted 15 December 2020 to the editors and that is also the cut-off point after which no new case law has been taken into account. |
7 | Inter alia articles 2, 3, and 6 TEU. |
8 | Traditionally, another criterion was added, namely having the nationality or long standing ties with the state concerned. While several states still hold on to a nationality requirement, increasingly it is accepted that also immigrant groups can qualify, especially when they have been in the country for several generations, cf. (Eide 2010, pp. 165–94). |
9 | This line of thinking is arguably visible in the FCNM where some of the rights are reserved for minorities that inhabit areas either traditionally or in substantial numbers: inter alia article 11(2) FCNM. |
10 | In Western Europe parts of the Iberian peninsula were under Muslim rule between the 8th and 15th Century, while in Eastern Europe Islam was introduced by Mongol Rulers in the 13–14th Century, and further consolidated during the rule of the Ottoman Empire, cf. (Nielsen 2011). In the countries of the European part of the former Soviet Union (the Baltic states and Belarus) Muslims have been present over more than 600 years, cf. (Larsson and Racius 2010, vol. 3, pp. 350–73). |
11 | See inter alia Benton, Meghan, and Anne Nielson. 2013. Integrating Europe’s Muslim Minorities: Public Anxie-ties, Policy Responses. Migration Policy Institue, May 10. Available online: https://www.migrationpolicy.org/article/integrating-europes-muslim-minorities-public-anxieties-policy-responses (accessed on 12 December 2020). |
12 | These two dimensions of the right to equal treatment were already visible in Aristotle’s understanding of equality, cap-tured in the dictum ‘treat like cases alike and different cases differently to the extent of the difference’: Aristo-tle, Nicomachean Ethics, 1130b–32b; cf. Plato, Laws, VI.757b-c. |
13 | Several reports by prominent NGO’s, as well as various bodies of the Council of Europe and the EU’s Fundamental Rights Agency document the worrying trend of multiple manifestations of intolerance against Muslims: Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), Islam, Islamism and Islamophobia in Europe (Resolution 1743) Council of Europe 2010. |
14 | Article 26,2 FCNM. It is important to realise that while the AC only advises the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe, the latter tends to adopt the recommendations formulated by the AC. Admittedly, the interpretation by the FCNM’s Advisory Committee does tend to identify several positive state obliga-tions to protect religious pluralism, a positive duty to protect the identity of religious minorities, while recognizing sev-eral de facto duties of reasonable accommodation: duties to revitalize religious heritage (Advisory Committee 2003, §592; 2009, §97), to respect burial customs of religious minorities (Advisory Committee 2008, § 65–6; 2010, §95), and to facilitate the availability of kosher food (Advisory Committee 2006, §68; 2014, §68). Importantly, given the rise in Islamophobia in the western world the latest round of periodic state reporting elicited several expressions of concern about the spread of Islamophobia and the concomitant stifling effect of attacks against people wearing reli-gious dress, and of state imposed restrictions on ritual slaughter (Advisory Committee 2016, pp. 6, 15, 17–8). Notwithstanding the positive and inclusionary signals the supervisory practice of the AC sends about religious minorities, the information in periodic reporting and shadow reports has not yet induced the AC to identify explicit duties of reasonable accom-modation in relation to religion in the working and educational environment. Put differently, the interpretation and ap-plication of minority specific rights has not fully matched the lacuna left by the formulation of the standards. |
15 | Article 2 jo. 5(3) UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities; Article 5 of EU Directive 2000/78 (Employment Equality Directive). |
16 | Adoption of the Directive under Article 19 TFEU would require unanimity in the Council. |
17 | The principle of conferral is enshrined in article 5(2) TEU. |
18 | See Article 2 TEU. |
19 | See ‘Accession Criteria (Copenhagen Criteria’ [https://eur-lex.europa.eu/summary/glossary/accession_criteria_copenhague.html, accessed on 24 September 2021] with reference to articles 49 and 6(1) TEU. See also [https://www.europarl.europa.eu/enlargement/briefings/20a2_en.htm, accessed on 24 September 2021] with reference to the translation in terms of ratification of the FCNM. |
20 | Belgium, France, Greece are indeed missing from the list of state parties to the FCNM: https://www.coe.int/en/web/minorities/etats-partie accessed on 24 September 2021. |
21 | The Treaty of Lisbon amended article 6 TEU so that its first paragraph reads The Union recognises the rights, freedoms and principles set out in the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union of 7 December 2000, as adapted at Strasbourg, on 12 December 2007, which shall have the same legal value as the Treaties. Hence by reference the Char-ter now has the same legal value as the primary treaties. |
22 | Article 21(1) EU Charter of Fundamental Rights. |
23 | See also Guide on Article 14 of the ECHR and on Article 1 of Protocol No 12 to the convention, [https://www.echr.coe.int/Documents/Guide_Art_14_Art_1_Protocol_12_ENG.pdf accessed on 24 September 2021], p. 29. |
24 | Furthermore and relatedly, the still overriding value of the free movement principle/Internal Market within the EU’s integration project has been seen to put a strain on existing national minority specific standards (towards the protec-tion of indigenous minority languages) (Von Toggenburg 2008, p. 95; Kochenov 2010, vol. 35, p. 307) (Groener 1989; Angonese 2000; Bickel and Franz 1998). Limiting the national rules aimed at protecting an endangered official lan-guage in order to secure the free movement of EU citizens, curtails national minority protection rules for the sake of the EU internal market project (See in this respect the Groener case and the rules aimed at protecting the Irish lan-guage in the educational system: the CJEU in the end validated these linguistic requirements for teachers but only after a most strict proportionality test). Any extension of benefits to the EU citizens making use of their free movement rights, may at first sight not dilute the rights of the national minorities concerned but it does alter the equilibrium (Von Toggenburg 2008, p. 111). Again, the centrality of the position of EU citizens for the overall EU integration project is confirmed as is the extent to which this concern is allowed to outweigh (national) minority protection concerns and laws. |
25 | See note 16. |
26 | See inter alia articles 13 and 17 TEU. |
27 | The extent to which the European Commission is willing to see article 22 as aimed at the protection of minorities, could influence its pre-legislative scrutiny of legislative proposals against the Charter: since 2001 the Commission has en-gaged in a fundamental rights compatibility check, which was further strengthened in 2005. |
28 | See articles 165 and 167 TFEU. |
29 | Parliament and Council Decision 1855/2006, Establishing the Culture Programme 2007–2013, 2006 OJ (L372) 1 EC: notwithstanding its huge scope and its aim to promote cultural diversity and dialogue it only has one reference to mi-norities, and non to migrants. |
30 | The focus on language learning and linguistic diversity is all about promoting employability and mobility, and thus again the optimalisation of the EU’s economic integration project. In contrast to Commission Communication on Pro-moting Language Learning and Linguistic Diversity: An Action Plan 2004–2006, COM (2003)449 final (24 July 2003), the 2014 Council of the European Union’s Conclusions on multilingualism and the development of language competences no longer includes migrant languages. |
31 | There is not yet any case law regarding article 14 Charter’s parental rights in relation to the public education of their children Art. 14(3) charter reads: ‘…the right of parents to ensure the education and teaching of their children in con-formity with their religious, philosophical and pedagogical convictions shall be respected, in accordance with the na-tional laws governing the exercise of such freedom and right. |
32 | Because in casu Vivien Prais had given a very late notice of the religious constraints she faced on the chosen date, the Court concluded that no violation of the freedom of religion took place: para 20. |
33 | The article was submitted to the editors on 15 December 2020 and later case law has not been included in the analysis. The CJEU’s case law in relation to religious minorities is steadily expanding and requires sustained follow up. |
34 | Egenberger concerned the demand to be a member of a Protestant church for making a report, an operational activity which as such is not that important for the manifestation of the particular religion concerned. |
35 | IR was fired for having divorced and remarried which would be incompatible with the Catholic ethos of the organization where he worked, while these demands were only imposed on Catholic employees with managerial roles. |
36 | IR: In relation to the disapplication of the rule of German law following which the religious organisations own assess-ment about the nature of an occupational requirement as being justified. |
37 | The Court highlighted the fact that official members of these religious minority communities do not all perform reli-gious duties on this day, nor do they all have the feeling of constraints when they have to work anyway on this day. These members of the religious minorities would be in a comparable situation as members of other religious commu-nities, and hence the Austrian rule would amount to a differential treatment of comparable situations on grounds of religion: para. 45–50. |
38 | This requirement that the rule would be limited to employees with interaction with customers would in any event burden a very large group of workers, cf. (Loenen 2017, vol. 10, p. 67). |
39 | The CJEU acknowledges the interference with the freedom to manifest one’s religion but it does not give that any particular weight, it simply incorporates it in the justification analysis of a potential case of indirect discrimination. |
40 | For an example of this problematic type of reasoning, cf. (Cha’are Shalom Ve Tsedek v France 2000). |
41 | The CJEU has long recognized the right to equal treatment as a general principle of EC law, which would preclude not only that comparable situations are treated differently, but also that different situations are treated in the same way. |
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Henrard, K. EU Law’s Half-Hearted Protection of Religious Minorities Minority Specific Rights and Freedom of Religion for All. Religions 2021, 12, 830. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12100830
Henrard K. EU Law’s Half-Hearted Protection of Religious Minorities Minority Specific Rights and Freedom of Religion for All. Religions. 2021; 12(10):830. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12100830
Chicago/Turabian StyleHenrard, Kristin. 2021. "EU Law’s Half-Hearted Protection of Religious Minorities Minority Specific Rights and Freedom of Religion for All" Religions 12, no. 10: 830. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12100830
APA StyleHenrard, K. (2021). EU Law’s Half-Hearted Protection of Religious Minorities Minority Specific Rights and Freedom of Religion for All. Religions, 12(10), 830. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12100830