Kichwa, I disagree. Discrimination does not need to be explicitly announced, it can be construed from the actual circumstances. Which is why I said, except small contractual jobs and businesses that have working on Saturdays as a crucial element of what they do. Otherwise, anybody can practice discrimination if they just use clever wording. Why would an employer say that anybody unwilling to work specifically on Saturdays should not apply? Why do they need to protect Saturday and not Sunday? If it unfairly burdens religious minorities and cannot be explained by the nature of the business itself, it cannot be justified just because the employer discriminates without intending to or announcing it. A small Hospital that can only afford to hire two doctors might make such a requirement, but why would Barclays bank? The effect is to isolate a religious minority unfairly. And considering the profit-minded mode of formal employment in Kenya, you can bet they would all follow suit--employers-- and soon a faithful SDA cannot find employment in Kenya's formal sector. As a matter of public policy and basic justice, such a situation should not be permitted.