In Srinagar, activists distribute flowers, chocolates to hijab-wearing students
The Hindu
‘Wearing a hijab is our right and our dignity. It is our identity also’, says an activist
The controversy around hijab, Islamic headscarf, witnessed a spillover on Monday in Kashmir, where a group of women in burkha, head-to-toe veil, presented flowers and chocolates to students wearing hijab outside Kashmir University (KU) in Srinagar, in support of the dress code. “This is a gesture to appreciate those who wear hijab. Wearing a hijab is our right and our dignity. It is our identity also,” a burkha-wearing activist, carrying a bouquet, said outside the gates of KU. The activists, carrying flowers and chocolates, were seen appreciating those who came to the KU campus wearing hijab. “Other religions talk about different kinds of veil too. Hijab saves us from sins. It’s no sign of backwardness. Islam does not want women to lag behind in any field of progress,” another activist said. The activists appealed to the Karnataka government to “include hijab in uniforms as per the school’s colour code”. Central Kashmir’s Budgam also saw a pro-hijab protest on Sunday. Jammu and Kashmir’s regional leaders, including Mehbooba Mufti and Farooq Abdullah, have spoken in favour of hijab.
Dr. Abdullah on Sunday advocated that all faiths “should have the right to choose their dress codes”. “India is equal to all. You have a right to eat anything, to wear anything till you do not put the integrity of the nation in danger. Radical elements are trying to divide the people of the country on communal lines so as to win polls. God willing, it will end one day,” Dr. Abdullah said.

Former CM B.S. Yediyurappa had challenged the first information report registered on March 14, 2024, on the alleged incident that occurred on February 2, 2024, the chargesheet filed by the Criminal Investigation Department (CID), and the February 28, 2025, order of taking cognisance of offences afresh by the trial court.