Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
French National Assembly Votes To Ban Burqa Anywhere In Public
The lower house of France's parliament, the National Assembly, yesterday passed a bill to outlaw the wearing of garments such as the niqab and burqa anywhere in public. BBC News reports that the ban on the full-face Islamic veil passed by a vote of 335-1 with with 221 members not voting. Many members of the opposition Socialist Party, who wanted the ban limited to public buildings, abstained rather than voting no under pressure from supporters of the bill. The Senate must also approve the bill before it becomes law. A vote is expected in September. Under the bill, women who wear a full-face veil will be fined up to 150 Euros ($188), while men who force their wives to wear a burqa face a fine of 30,000 Euros ($37,700) and one year in jail. Only around 2000 women in France wear the burqa, though many French Muslims oppose the new law. The Council of State says the new law may be unconstitutional. Meanwhile a French businessman, Rachid Nekkaz, who thinks the law is unconstitutional says he will set up a fund of 1 million Euros to help women who violate the law pay their fines.