Burqas Ban in Netherlands
Category: Gossip, Personality, Lifestyle
The Netherlands would be the first European state to impose a countrywide ban on Islamic face coverings, though other countries have already outlawed them in specific places. The Dutch government has announced that it would seek a way of banning the wearing of burqas and other Muslim face veils in public places. The announcement comes at a time when the debate on such veils and whether they prevent Muslims from integrating has gathered momentum across Europe and drawn comments from leaders such as Italy’s Romano Prodi, and Britain’s Tony Blair.
Last December Dutch lawmakers voted in favour of a proposal by far-right politician Geert Wilders to outlaw face-coverings, partly on security grounds, and asked Immigration Minister Rita Verdonk to examine the feasibility of such a ban. Ms Verdonk said the fact veils were worn for religious reasons could bring new legislation into conflict with Dutch religious freedom laws, but signalled the government would try to find a way around this. “The cabinet finds the wearing of a burqa undesirable … but cannot at present enforce a total ban,” she said after a cabinet meeting.
Existing legislation already limits the wearing of burqas and other total coverings in public transport or schools, Ms Verdonk said, but the cabinet would discuss imposing as wide a ban as possible next week. “The government will search for the possibility to provide a ban,” her spokeswoman told Reuters.
The Muslim community estimates that only about 50 women in the Netherlands wear the head-to-toe burqa or the niqab, a face veil that conceals everything but the eyes.
The Dutch may have been among the first to legalise cannabis, prostitution and euthanasia “earning them a reputation for tolerance” but in recent years they have pushed through some of Europe’s toughest entry and integration laws.
Social and religious tensions have escalated in the last few years, exacerbated by the murder of film director Theo van Gogh by a Dutch-Moroccan militant in 2004.
In 2004, France banned overt religious symbols such as Muslim headscarves, large Christian crosses and Jewish skullcaps from schools, arguing they were contrary to its separation of church and state.
Dutch Muslim groups have complained a burqa ban would only make the country’s one million Muslims feel more victimised and alienated, regardless of whether they approve of burqas or not.
“What the government is doing now is totally disproportionate to the number of women who actually wear the burqa,” said Ayhan Tonca, chairman of an umbrella group of Dutch Muslim organisations. “The legislation we already have to protect people for security reasons is adequate,” he added.
Hope, a Dutch-born Muslim, said she wore a niqab because she wanted to. “Nobody has the right to forbid it. If someone decides I cannot wear it then I will feel suppressed,” she said.
The debate over the veil simmers for a while only to be fuelled by another series of controversies; In the UK’s cabinet minister Jack Straw called on Muslim women in the country to consider removing their veils which he claimed, impeded communication between communities. While Australian Muslim cleric Sheik Taj Din al-Hilali quoted an Islamic scholar in a sermon who said that rape victims should be imprisoned for life because “if she hadn’t left the meat uncovered, the cat wouldn’t have snatched it”. And an employment tribunal in UK ruled against Aishah Azmi, a British Muslim teacher who was suspended for wearing a veil while teaching.-Reuters-
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