The Citizen (KZN)

‘No face veil, please’

TWO MPS PUSH FOR BAN PROHIBITIN­G WOMEN WEARING NIQABS ‘Jihadist militant movements used them to carry out terrorist acts.’

- Mel Frykberg

Two Egyptian parliament­arians have submitted two controvers­ial draft laws to impose a ban on women wearing niqabs (face veils) in public places. Abu Hamed, an independen­t MP from Cairo, said the objective of his law was to impose a ban on wearing the niqab in public places, government institutio­ns, hospitals and schools, among others, Al Ahram Online reported.

Abu Hamed argued the proposed laws did not violate human rights or the freedoms enshrined in Egypt’s 2014 constituti­on.

“We have two Islamic countries, Tunisia and Algeria, that have imposed a ban on the niqab in public places, not to mention that France currently has the same ban,” he said, adding “the niqab is not part of Islamic law (sharia), and extremist groups use women wearing niqab to carry out terrorist attacks”.

“Several jihadist militant movements have used women wearing niqabs to carry out terrorist acts, kidnap children or assassinat­e public figures,” he said.

Female parliament­arian Ghada Agami, deputy chairperso­n of parliament’s foreign affairs committee, has drafted a similar law, arguing the face veil had become a source of sedition in Egyptian society.

“It aims to change the moderate character of Islam in Egypt and reflects the extremist ideology of Salafist (ultraconse­rvative) movements, not to mention it has split society into those with niqab and those without,” Agami said. However, should the laws be passed they are sure to further inflame the bitter divide between Cairo and the North African country’s Islamist movements – specifical­ly the Muslim Brotherhoo­d – and exacerbate the counter-insurgency being fought against al-Qaeda-affiliated elements in the restive Sinai Peninsula.

On Sunday, 19 Islamist militants accused of carrying out a deadly attack on Christians in Egypt were killed by police, Egypt’s interior ministry said.

France currently has the same ban

They died in a shoot-out after police pursued “fugitive terrorist elements” into the desert area west of Minya province.

Last Friday, seven Coptic Christians were killed in an attack on two buses near a monastery. The attack is the latest in a string of deadly attacks by the militants on Egypt’s Christian minority over the past few years.

Egypt’s first-ever democratic­ally elected, president Mohammed Morsi from the Brotherhoo­d, was overthrown in a military coup in 2013, paving the way for incumbent President Abdel-Fatah el Sisi to take control.

Under his leadership there has been a draconian crackdown on political opponents, critics, journalist­s and NGO employees with internatio­nal rights groups asserting that Egypt is experienci­ng some of the worst human rights abuses in its complicate­d history. – ANA

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