Austrian driver's religious headgear strains credulity
                                                                     
    
                       An  Austrian atheist has won the right to be shown on his driving-licence  photo wearing a pasta strainer as "religious headgear". 
         Niko Alm first applied for the licence three years ago after  reading that headgear was allowed in official pictures only for  confessional reasons. 
         Mr Alm said the sieve was a requirement of his religion, pastafarianism.
         The Austrian authorities required him to obtain a doctor's certificate that he was "psychologically fit" to drive. 
         The idea came into Mr Alm's noodle three years ago as a way of making a serious, if ironic, point.
         A self-confessed atheist, Mr Alm says he belongs to 
the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, a light-hearted faith whose members call themselves pastafarians.
      
      
       The group's website states that "the only dogma allowed in the  Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster is the rejection of dogma".
         In response to pressure for American schools to teach the  Christian theory known as intelligent design, as an alternative to  natural selection, the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster wrote to  the Kansas School Board asking for the pastafarian version of  intelligent design to be taught to schoolchildren, as an alternative to  the Christian theory.
   Straining credulity           In the same spirit, Mr Alm's pastafarian-style application for  a driving licence was a response to the Austrian recognition of  confessional headgear in official photographs.
         The licence took three years to come through and, according  to Mr Alm, he was asked to submit to a medical interview to check on his  mental fitness to drive but - straining credulity - his efforts have  finally paid off. 
         It is the police who issue driving licences in Austria, and  they have duly issued a laminated card showing Mr Alm in his unorthodox  item of religious headgear.
         The next step, Mr Alm told the Austrian news agency APA, is  to apply to the Austrian authorities for pastafarianism to become an  officially recognised faith.