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Dutch Government Backs Burqa Ban

AR Articles on Europe
Prospects for our Movement (Feb. 27, 2004)
Europe on the March (Jun. 2002)
Can Europe Learn the Lessons of Yugoslavia? (Sep. 2001)
Germany: Islamic Gangrene (Nov. 1999)
Race in Scandanavia (Dec. 2003)
Search AmRen.com for Europe
More news stories on Europe
BBC News, Nov. 17, 2006

The Dutch cabinet has backed a proposal by the country’s immigration minister to ban Muslim women from wearing the burqa in public places.

The burqa, a full body covering that also obscures the face, would be banned by law in the street, and in trains, schools, buses and the law courts.

The cabinet said burqas disturb public order, citizens and safety.

The decision comes days ahead of elections which the ruling centre-right coalition is expected to win.

Immigration Minister Rita Verdonk, who is known for her tough policies, said it was important that all people in the Netherlands were able to see and identify each other clearly to promote integration and tolerance.

Last year a majority of MPs in the Dutch parliament said they were in favour of a ban.

An estimated 6% of 16 million people living in the Netherlands are Muslims.

But there are thought to be fewer than 100 women who choose to wear the burqa, a traditional Islamic form of dress.

Civil rights debate

The latest move came after an expert committee judged that it would not contravene Dutch law.

Other forms of face coverings, such as crash helmets with visors that obscure the face, would also be covered by a legal ban.

Ms Verdonk insisted the burqa was not an acceptable part of public life in the Netherlands.

“The Cabinet finds it undesirable that face-covering clothing—including the burqa—is worn in public places for reasons of public order, security and protection of citizens,” she said.

Critics of the proposed ban say it would violate civil rights.

The main Muslim organisation in the Netherlands, CMO, said the plan was an “over-reaction to a very marginal problem”, the Associated Press reported.

But the minister told the BBC that social interaction would be easier if faces were not covered.

“It is very important that we can see each other and can communicate with each other. Because we are so tolerant we want to respect each other.”

Tension

The issue of the type of clothing worn by Muslim women has become a hotly-debated subject in a range of European countries.

France has passed a law banning religious symbols, including Muslim headscarves, from schools.

Some German states ban teachers in public schools from wearing headscarves, but there is no blanket rule against burqas.

Italy has banned face-coverings, resurrecting old laws passed to combat domestic terrorism, while citing new security fears.

The issue of Muslim women’s dress also surfaced in the UK, where former Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said women should not wear the veil.

The Dutch relationship with its Muslim community has been under scrutiny since the murder of film-maker Theo van Gogh by Islamic extremists in November 2004.

Earlier this year Ms Verdonk clashed with a minority party in the governing coalition over her handling of the citizenship case of Somali-born Dutch MP Ayaan Hirsi Ali.

The MP scripted a controversial film about the treatment of women in Islamic society, directed by van Gogh before he was killed.

But she admitted lying on her 1992 application for Dutch citizenship, and Ms Verdonk initially called for the MP to be deported.

Original article

(Posted on November 20, 2006)

The proposed burqa ban comes ahead of Dutch elections.
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