Originally posted by Wikinews.
Wikinews content appears under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 license
except where specified. As these articles are static snapshots of news
items that may be later updated, they may not represent the latest or final
revision of that article, and posted information may be only preliminary.

French MPs call for ban on veils for Muslim women
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
January 26, 2010
Original URL: http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/French_MPs_call_for_ban_on_veils_for_Muslim_women



An all-party committee of French parliamentarians has recommended that
Muslim women should be banned from wearing face veils when using public
services such as hospitals and public transport.  Other recommendations
include refusing citizenship or residence permits to those who visibly
show "radical religious practice". The report does not call for a
complete ban, but it would place a number of restrictions on daily life
for those who wished to carry on wearing a veil.

, a type of Islamic face veil. 
According to the committee's report, "The wearing of the full veil is a
challenge to our republic. This is unacceptable."  It added, "We must
condemn this excess". It criticised the practice as being contrary to
French principles of secularism and equality, and called for the French
Parliament to adopt resolutions against the face veil.  Bernard Accoyer,
the President of the National Assembly, said that the veil was a "symbol
of the repression of women", and of "extremist fundamentalism".

The report, which is nearly 200 pages long, has been produced after the
committee took evidence for five months from religious leaders and human
rights experts. The committee was told by Muslims that a law would
increase feelings of alienation, even though the veil was not worn by
the majority of Muslims. Earlier this year, the French President,
Nicolas Sarkozy, said that veils were "not welcome" in France. Although
he stopped short of calling for a ban, this would be the preferred
option of about two-thirds of the French people, according to opinion
polls.

Some members of the committee favoured going further, but agreement
could not be reached on a complete ban "at this stage", it was said. One
member called this "a missed opportunity". An ban on covering the face
when accessing public services would affect those using hospitals,
schools, universities, post offices, and banks.  Legislation in 2004
banned the wearing of head scarves and other religious symbols in French
public schools.

French government sources say that about 1,900 women in France wear an
Islamic veil (mainly the niqab, which does not cover the eyes), out of
about 5 million Muslims in the country – the largest Muslim population
in Western Europe. Fears have been expressed that a ban would make
France a terrorist target, even if it could be implemented.  The
Socialist opposition party, on the whole, is against a ban on principle,
and has concerns that such a move would unfairly single out Muslim
women.

== Sources ==

* http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8480161.stm
* http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article7002294.ece
* http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/27/world/europe/27france.html