Global Times

France under fire over beach attire

Debate erupts over apparent targeting of Muslim women

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An angry debate over a ban on burkinis in France was further stoked Wednesday as images of a veiled woman surrounded by police on a beach in Nice went viral.

The series of photos published by British media showed a woman dressed in leggings, a tunic and headscarf lying on a beach surrounded by four police officers.

At one point the woman removes her tunic – it is unclear if she was ordered to do so or did so of her own accord – while a policeman appears to write out a fine.

The photos, whose source is not clear, caused a furor on Twitter, where many interprete­d them as the woman being forced to undress by police.

Underneath the tunic, she was wearing a sleeveless top.

“Question of the day: How many armed policemen does it take to force a woman to strip in public?” Andrew Stroehlein, European Media Director of Human Rights Watch, wrote on Twitter.

A comment by an activist named Sihame Assbague, retweeted more than 7,000 times, said the scene has made France “the laughingst­ock of the world.”

“I am so ashamed,” wrote French feminist Caroline De Haas. The hashtag # WTFFrance ( What the F** k France) was trending on French Twitter.

Nice is one of about 15 French towns which has banned the wearing of the burkini – a full- body Islamic swimsuit which covers the head – on beaches, with government declaring it to contravene French secular values and threaten public order.

But the vague wording of the bans, which refer to beachwear that conspicuou­sly demonstrat­e a person’s religion, has created confusion.

Beachgoers have been left to puzzle over whether it refers solely to head- to- toe swimwear, which some non- Muslims wear for protection from the sun, or to being fully clothed and having one’s head covered on the seashore.

A mother of two told AFP on Tuesday she had been fined on the beach in the resort of Cannes for wearing leggings.

“I was sitting on a beach with my family. I was wearing a classic headscarf. I had no intention of swimming,” said the 34- year- old who gave only her first name, Siam.

France’s highest administra­tive court, the State Council, will on Thursday examine a request by the Human Rights League to scrap the ban.

Lower courts have supported the decision by French mayors, with a tribunal in Nice – where a crowd was mowed down in July in a grisly truck attack – saying the burkini could “be felt as a defiance or a provocatio­n exacerbati­ng tensions felt by” the community.

 ??  ?? Police force a woman to take off her outer clothing on the beach in Nice near the Promenade des Anglais on Tuesday. The woman did not appear to have been wearing a burkini, which has been banned on beaches by some local mayors.
Police force a woman to take off her outer clothing on the beach in Nice near the Promenade des Anglais on Tuesday. The woman did not appear to have been wearing a burkini, which has been banned on beaches by some local mayors.

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