France
'burkini ban': Images of police on beach fuel debate
The incident happened close to where more than
80 people died in an Islamist attack in July
Pictures have emerged of French
police appearing to enforce the controversial "burkini ban" on a
woman on a beach in the southern city of Nice.
Police appear to issue a fine
to the woman, who is then seen removing a veil and baring her arms.
Nice's deputy mayor said the
removal of burkinis was a "necessity" after the deadly jihadist
attack last month.
The French Council of the
Muslim Faith (CFCM) expressed concern at the direction the public debate was
taking.
A bid to overturn the ban is
due to come before France's highest administrative court on Thursday.
The incident, which took place on Tuesday,
happened close to the site of the
jihadist attack on Bastille Day in July.
Rudy Salles, the deputy mayor
of Nice, said: "It's a necessity after... the 14th of July on the
Promenade des Anglais.
"It is not the habit and
the custom of the Muslims in Nice to wear [clothes] like this on the
beach."
Since the photographs went
viral, Anouar Kbibech, the president of the CFCM, said he was "concerned
over the direction the public debate is taking", citing the "growing
fear of stigmatisation of Muslims in France".
Interior Minister Bernard
Cazeneuve has agreed to a meeting with the CFCM.
The town of Cannes was the first to pass the
summer ban on 13 August
Among many remarks about the
incident on Twitter, the European Media Director of Human Rights Watch, Andrew
Stroehlein, wrote: "Question of the day: How many armed policemen does it
take to force a woman to strip in public?"
It is not clear from the
photographs if the woman was ordered to remove items of clothing by the police,
or if she did so of her own accord.
The 34-year-old mother, who
gave her name only as Siam, told the AFP agency that she had been sitting on
the beach in leggings, a tunic and a headscarf, when she was fined.
She said: "I had no
intention of swimming."
The mayor of Cannes' ruling
The rules have been imposed by more than 20
municipalities in France
- "Access to beaches and for swimming is banned to any person wearing improper clothes that are not respectful of good morals and secularism"
- "Beachwear which ostentatiously displays religious affiliation, when France and places of worship are currently the target of terrorist attacks, is liable to create risks of disrupting public order"
- The infringement is punishable with a fine of €38 (£33)
- The ban remains in place until 31 August 2016
The Muslim rights group,
Collective against Islamophobia, said that 16 women have been given fines in
the past fortnight on the Riviera under the ban - but argues that none were
wearing a burkini.
The group said they were all
wearing headscarves, tops and leggings.
BBC Paris correspondent Hugh
Schofield says the so-called burkini ban actually makes no mention of the
burkini.
The rules simply say beachwear
must be respectful of good public manners and the principle of secularism
which, he says, leaves large room for interpretation and confusion.
The controversial rules
surrounding swimwear have been imposed by more than 20 municipalities in
France.
BBC
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