Kuwait Times

Le Pen cancels meeting with Lebanon mufti over headscarf

- ‘Lesser evil’

BEIRUT: France’s far-right presidenti­al candidate Marine Le Pen sparked controvers­y yesterday during her brief visit to Lebanon when she refused to wear a veil to meet the country’s top Sunni Muslim cleric. On her last day in the small Mediterran­ean country, Le Pen arrived at Sheikh Abdellatif Deryan’s office in Beirut and was offered a white shawl to cover her blonde hair.

The National Front candidate promptly refused and made a brief statement to journalist­s before leaving. “The highest Sunni authority in the world had not had this requiremen­t, so I have no reason to,” Le Pen said, referring to her 2015 visit to Al-Azhar, the prestigiou­s Egyptian institutio­n of Sunni Islamic learning.

She said she had told Deryan’s office on Monday that she would not don a veil: “They did not cancel the meeting, so I thought they would accept that I will not wear the scarf.” “They wanted to impose this on me, to present me with a fait accompli. Well, no one presents me with a fait accompli,” the candidate said.

Deryan heads Dar al-Fatwa, the highest Sunni authority in Lebanon. In a statement yesterday, the body said “its press office had informed the presidenti­al candidate, through one of her assistants, of the need to cover her head when she meets his eminence, according to the protocol assumed by Dar Al-Fatwa”.

“Dar Al-Fatwa officials were surprised by her refusal to conform to this wellknown rule,” the statement said. Fewer than a dozen protesters gathered near Lebanon’s Zaytuna Bay yesterday afternoon to protest against Le Pen’s visit.” From Beirut to Damascus to Paris to Washington, fascists flock together,” one placard read.

One banner read “Fascists out!”, and demonstrat­ors carried pictures of Le Pen and US President Donald Trump. Yesterday is Le Pen’s last day in Lebanon, where she met a foreign head of state for the first time-President Michel Aoun.

The FN leader, whose party takes an anti-immigrant stance, also met Prime Minister Saad Hariri, a Sunni Muslim, and Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil. Islamic dress is a hot-button issue in France, where the full-face veil is banned in public places. Le Pen’s deputy Florian Philippot swiftly lauded her controvers­ial move. “A magnificen­t message of liberty and emancipati­on sent to the women of France and of the world,” Philippot wrote on Twitter.

Shunned by European leaders over her party’s stance on immigratio­n and its antiEU message, Le Pen’s meeting with Aoun aimed to boost her internatio­nal credibilit­y. France had mandate power over both Lebanon and Syria during the first half of the 20th century.

Le Pen has met few top foreign officials since taking control of the FN in 2011. German Chancellor Angela Merkel has refused to meet with her. After leaving Deryan’s office, Le Pen headed to Bkerkeh, north of Beirut, to meet Maronite Catholic Beshara Rai.

She is also set to meet Samir Geagea, who heads the Lebanese Forces party and is a fierce opponent of Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad.

In an interview with Lebanon’s L’OrientLe Jour, Le Pen called Assad “the lesser evil” compared to the Islamic State jihadist group in Syria.

She has also criticized the EU’s calls for Assad to stand down after nearly six years of war that have left more than 310,000 people dead. “Marine Le Pen’s statements in Lebanon are an insult to the Lebanese people and the Syrian people,” wrote Lebanese Druze chief Walid Jumblatt on Twitter.

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 ?? — AP ?? BEIRUT: Lebanese communist protesters hold placards with Arabic that read, ‘You are not welcome’ during a protest against France’s far-right presidenti­al candidate Marine Le Pen’s visit, in Beirut yesterday.
— AP BEIRUT: Lebanese communist protesters hold placards with Arabic that read, ‘You are not welcome’ during a protest against France’s far-right presidenti­al candidate Marine Le Pen’s visit, in Beirut yesterday.

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