Kündigung wegen US-Sanktionsdrohung? Telekom droht Schlappe vor EuGH
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EuGH-Experte: Anspruch auf Urlaubsersatzleistung auch nach Kündigung
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EuGH-Generalanwalt: Keine Produkthaftung bei Fehler in Kolumne
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(AP Photo/Lisa Rathke)
LUXEMBOURG (CN) Ruling against an unlikely alliance of Jewish and Muslim leaders, the EU’s highest court held Thursday that member states can require that animals be stunned before being killed.
The European Court of Justice found that Belgium’s animal slaughter law does not violate the rights of Jews and Muslims, who argued the regulation infringes on their religious beliefs.
“The measures … allow a fair balance to be struck between the importance attached to animal welfare and the freedom of Jewish and Muslim believers to manifest their religion,” the Luxembourg-based court wrote.
EU regulations require that animals be “rendered insensible to pain before slaughter,” but member states can make exceptions for religious rituals. In a law that went into effect in 2019, Belgium mandated that all animals be stunned before slaughter, virtually banning Jewish and Islamic ritual slaughter, which requires that animals be in perfect health before