In another step toward outlawing the wearing of the burqa in France, yesterday the French National Assembly, the country's Parliament, adopted by a vote of 434-0 a non-binding resolution declaring that "radical practices which violate the dignity and equality between men and women, such as the wearing of the full veil, are contrary to the values of the republic." AFP reports that 30 Communist members in the 577-seat National Assembly walked out in protest of the vote. The Sarkozy government is moving ahead with a bill that will formally ban the burqa in public (see prior posting), though the Socialist opposition, in order to avoid a court challenge, wants the ban limited to wearing of the burqa in state institutions. The government's bill will cover wealthy foreign tourists who currently often frequent shops in Paris while fully veiled.
Meanwhile yesterday, the Council of Europe announced in a press release that its Parliamentary Assembly's Committee on Culture, Science and Education has adopted a resolution opposing a general ban on the niqab or burqa for women who "genuinely and freely desire" to wear it. It said a more limited ban for security purposes or where public or professional functions call for religious neutrality or showing of one's face may be justified. However a broader ban may violate freedom of religion protected by the European Convention on Human Rights.