WELLINGTON - A New Zealand schoolboy won the right
to keep his long hair on Friday after the nation’s top court combed
through the merits of an often tangled case and found in his favour.
Lucan Battison, 16, called in the lawyers after he was suspended from
St John’s College in Hastings last month for refusing to cut his mop of
curly hair.
The Catholic school said it did not meet the school rule that hair be
“off the collar and out of the eyes” and refused to accept his
compromise offer of wearing it in a bun.
During the High Court hearing, Battison’s lawyer Jol Bates said his
client was standing up for his rights, likening him to US civil rights
leader Martin Luther King and suffragettes who won the vote for women.
The case has enjoyed front-page coverage in New Zealand and generated
heated debate on social media, with some accusing the school of being
heavy handed and others saying Battison should obey the rules.
Judge David Collins sided with the teenager on Friday, finding the
school’s hair policy was open to interpretation and his refusal to cut
his locks did not warrant suspension.
- “(School) principals must ensure that serious disciplinary consequences are reserved for truly serious cases,” he said in a judgement.
- The school said in a statement that it was “naturally disappointed” with the decision but did not indicate whether it would appeal.
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