New Delhi: The hijab controversy, which started in Karnataka, has become a national issue with street protests and support from political parties. The apex court also heard the entire matter for 10 consecutive days, heard the side of Muslims and also went to the side of the school, talked to the teachers and many other views. Now after hearing all those arguments, today i.e. on Thursday (October 13), the Supreme Court has given the verdict. A two-judge bench has ruled on whether the ban on hijab in Karnataka is right or wrong. A bench of Justices Hemant Gupta and Sudhanshu Dhulia pronounced the verdict in the case. The two judges have given different verdicts on this matter. While Justice Gupta has dismissed the petition filed against the hijab ban while supporting the order of the Karnataka government, Justice Dhulia has given the opposite decision and set aside the order of ban on hijab given by the Karnataka government. In such a situation, it is now believed that this entire case of hijab dispute will be handed over to a larger bench and the hearing in the apex court will start again. Let me tell you that, this whole story is about the demand to wear hijab in the classroom, the Muslim side says that, they should be allowed to wear hijab inside the classroom. At the same time, the government says that uniform runs in educational institutions and every student should follow it because there are no Hindus and Muslims in schools and colleges, only students. Hijab controversy in the world:- Let me tell you that it is not that the dispute over hijab is going on only in India, some radical Islamic countries like Iran-Turkey are also assertive on hijab. But, in these Muslim countries, women are trying to be free by taking off the hijab. In fact, due to the appearance of hair from the hijab in Iran, the moral police there had beaten the 22-year-old girl Mahsa Amini so brutally that she went into a coma and died a few days later. After this Muslim women of Iran came out on the streets against this fundamentalism and started throwing hijabs and burning them. Iran's dictatorial government also took a tough stand to crush the movement of these women and even opened fire from the police on the protesters. Nearly 200 people have lost their lives in the movement so far, but Iran's Muslim women are struggling and receiving support from around the world. At the same time, the Muslim community in India is demanding to wear hijab inside the classroom, on which there was a long hearing in the Supreme Court and the decision is going to come today. 15-year-old child's successful complex non-surgical heart valve replacement at Army Hospital India maintained post-pandemic growth momentum: FM Sitharaman October is halfway, but rain continues.., see the IMD forecast