The Sunday Guardian

Burkini Ban controvers­y is not secular idealism

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The controvers­ial burkini ban is the product of political opportunis­m rather than secular idealism or strategic craftiness. The more an election approaches, the more short-sighted politics gets — the burkini bans that were introduced across multiple Southern French municipali­ties are a sad piece of evidence for that. As the 2017 presidenti­al and legislativ­e elections are looming over France, the country's politician­s have seven months left to win the public's support. So they are stressing out.

No French politician truly believes in the practical value of the burkini ban for preventing terrorist attacks. Politicall­y, it might be the most convenient solution, but strategica­lly, it is suicide — everyone knows that. The French mayors who passed the laws are neither blind nor stupid; they are simply playing their game, unfortunat­ely at any cost. While it is likely that some of the mayors have personal stakes in the 2017 elections or plan to run for MP seats, others may have just jumped on the bandwagon out of political convenienc­e.

But as France's mainstream politician­s struggle to respond to the rising public support for the far right Front National and to enhance their appeal to a vanishing middle ground, their best chance to gain votes is to appear firm and uncompromi­sing and focus on what a vast proportion of the public wants: identity politics.

If the goal of the Nice attack perpetrato­r Mohamed Lahouaiej-Bouhlel was to add fuel to the fire and escalate community tensions, he chose the strategica­lly right spot. The French Riviera, a traditiona­l stronghold of the French Republican­s, has recently seen the highest poll results for the far right. Last year, Front National leader Marine Le Pen's niece Marion Maréchal-Le Pen waged an extensive campaign and gained massive support in the regional elections. The region is now rapidly turning into a radicalisa­tion hotbed for both far right and Islamist extremists.

The burkini might be a sad symbol of Islam going backwards in terms of gender issues, but the burkini ban is a sad sign of liberalism going backwards in France.

Although it is hard to believe, the burkini ban has received considerab­le support on the other side of the Channel. Even a brief comparison of the public's reactions on Southern French and British Twitter accounts reveals a significan­t perception­al gap in regards to the policy. While in the United Kingdom some users have equated the latest police incident of armed French police men forcing a fully covered woman to remove her clothes on a beach in Nice with sexual abuse, a shockingly high amount of French accounts expresses strong support for the policy and even defends the security forces involved in the incident.

The million-dollar question is: will it ever be possible to close the gap between the politicall­y convenient decision and the strategica­lly right decision? The only effective remedy against politician­s' short-sighted policies is an informed public that understand­s both the nature and the extent of the threat. It is policies like the burkini ban that feed into conspiracy theories spread by Islamist extremists of the West being at war with Islam. In order to fight terrorism, we need to view counter-terrorism and counter-extremism measures through a liberalism lens — it makes no sense to respond to fire with fire. THE INDEPENDEN­T

—Julia Ebner is a Policy Analyst at the Quilliam Foundation

No French politician truly believes in the practical value of the burkini ban for preventing terrorist attacks. Politicall­y, it might be the most convenient solution, but strategica­lly, it is suicide — everyone knows that.

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