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Refusal to allow attendance at Mosque was justifiable

In Cherfi v G4S Security Services Ltd the EAT upheld a tribunal’s decision that an employer’s refusal to allow a security guard to leave a client’s site on Friday lunchtimes to attend mosque did not amount to indirect religious discrimination.

In Cherfi v G4S Security Services Ltd the EAT upheld a tribunal’s decision that an employer’s refusal to allow a security guard to leave a client’s site on Friday lunchtimes to attend mosque did not amount to indirect religious discrimination. Balancing the employer’s operational needs with the discriminatory effect on the employee, the tribunal was entitled to find that the requirement for security guards to remain on site was objectively justified as a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim.

Mr Cherfi, is a Muslim. G4S was required to have a specified number of security guards on site for the full duration of operating hours, i.e. to remain on site throughout their shifts, including their lunch breaks, for which they were paid. Mr Cherfi raised a grievance about not being allowed to attend lunchtime prayers on Fridays. The Company proposed amending his contract so that he worked from Monday to Thursday, with an option to work Saturday or Sunday, but this was rejected.

The EAT upheld the tribunal’s decision that G4S had not indirectly discriminated against Mr Cherfi by requiring him to remain at work on Friday at lunchtime. While the provision, criterion or practice (PCP) put him at a disadvantage as a practising Muslim, the PCP was justified as a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim, namely the operational needs of the company’s business. The tribunal had properly carried out the balancing act required. The potential negative cost to the business far outweighed any discriminatory effect since there would be not only financial penalties for the company if the contract was broken, but a danger of it losing the contract altogether.

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