Gulf News

France ought to ensure decency and rule of law

The country finds itself in a quagmire of its own making, following the burkini scandal — proof that it has still not found a way to ensure members of its Muslim population are equal citizens of the republic

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can’t remember a time in recent history when France has appeared so isolated on an internatio­nal level because of its own political choices. The criticism that has been levelled at France ever since the burkini scandal broke — especially since the pictures emerged of armed policemen forcing a Muslim woman sitting on a beach to partly undress — has brought to mind other, different, but no less spectacula­r instances of what some have described as “French-bashing”.

In 2003, when France opposed the Iraq war, anti-French sentiment in America reached such a degree that French fries were renamed “freedom fries” in some restaurant­s, including Congress cafeterias. In 1995, after France carried out nuclear tests in the Pacific, there was an internatio­nal boycott of French wines. Now we have seen a demonstrat­ion of women denouncing discrimina­tion in front of the French embassy in London, and social media is awash with messages mocking France’s obsession with a piece of clothing.

The burkini ban imposed this month by 30 French municipali­ties carries so many outright absurditie­s that it is no surprise there has been a global backlash. How could it be that France’s proclaimed attachment to universal values came to this? How could it be that in Cannes, of all places — on the very beach where in 1953 Brigitte Bardot famously posed in a bikini — women could now be told what they can and can’t wear?

So much has been said about this political, social and moral mess that trying to make sense of it is to risk appearing complacent or in denial about France’s republican or democratic flaws. I’m not. France has dug itself into a hole it needs to climb out of quickly.

But if there is one positive aspect to a situation in which so much confusion, paranoia, racism and hypocrisy have been thrown around, it is that finally a court has clarified what the law says — and what principles need to be upheld. In a keenly awaited ruling, France’s highest administra­tive court, the Conseil d’Etat, overturned the burkini ban because, the judges said, “it represents a severe and manifestly illegal threat to fundamenta­l freedoms that are the freedom of coming and going, freedom of conscience and personal freedom”.

The Conseil d’Etat gave no credence whatsoever to claims that the burkini ban, as some of its defenders have claimed, was necessary to uphold laïcité, France’s brand of secularism; nor was it a way of protecting “public order”. In a context where France is still officially in a state of emergency following the recent terror attacks in the country, this is significan­t.

It took France a long time to find the right balance between respecting the Catholic traditions of many of its people and implementi­ng its 1905 law of separation of church and state. In recent decades, what has been unfolding — and has now taken on an increasing­ly hysterical dimension — is a new quest for a democratic notion of inclusiven­ess within French society for Muslims, especially French-born youngsters who feel disenfranc­hised. None of this has been made easier by the fact that France still has to come to terms with its colonial past, and that terrorism has made toxic passions swirl.

A society upended

French politics today has been upended by the public order question: Nicolas Sarkozy called last week for the banning of all religious clothing in public areas — a message intended to court far-right and anti-Muslim voters ahead of next year’s presidenti­al election. Claims that the burkini is a threat to “hygiene” or “good manners” have been exposed as completely groundless, but it has been trickier to sweep aside claims that, in France’s tense atmosphere, the burkini might set off scuffles or other violent incidents on French beaches. Many people reading this will immediatel­y jump: Applied to beaches in Britain, does that mean a Sikh wearing a turban, or any other person carrying “conspicuou­s” religious clothing, would represent some sort of risk?

However, it is possible that the mayor of Nice — a city still traumatise­d by July’s terror attack, and where there have been signs of inter-ethnic tensions — may have had reasonable concerns that racist people might want to attack a woman wearing the burkini. Of course, the first thing to say about this is that upholding public order should be the responsibi­lity of the police — not of women, who must be free to choose their clothes. But the reason the French Prime Minister, Manuel Valls, recently shifted from talking about the “enslavemen­t” of women (as a way of explaining his support for the ban) to mentioning “public order” is that this offered a potentiall­y more solid basis for his views — which last week led to a show of divisions within the government. Now the highest court has clearly ruled that neither “public order” nor “emotions linked to terrorist acts” can be invoked to legitimise the ban.

President Francois Hollande has carefully stayed away from the arguments, no doubt waiting for the ruling. But that does little to hide the fact that France’s second socialist president under the Fifth Republic has failed to genuinely reach out to Muslims, especially the young, to reassure them that they will be considered equal citizens, and need not feel overlooked. Again, there is historical precedent: In the 1980s, when the Front National first reared its head, Hollande’s predecesso­r, François Mitterrand, also missed an opportunit­y to convey that sense of inclusiven­ess, despite many slogans heard at the time (such as‘ touche pas à mon pote’, meaning, ‘do not touch my friend’).

The roots of France’s republican model go back to the battle between church and state, and also to its colonial past. A historian once told me that Britain’s multicultu­ralism partly points to the way it ran its empire, through “indirect rule”, whereas the French ran theirs directly, in part by settling one million nationals in Algeria.

The ruling is a crucial turning point. It will hopefully restore common decency and the rule of law, and emphasise that the burkini does not in itself threaten public order. If that had been the case, then France’s state of emergency would have meant that, officially, citizens of different background­s or faiths could no longer safely sit on a beach together. The ruling isn’t the solution to all the issues that have to be dealt with — that’s some way off. But hopefully it will give a troubled nation some breathing space. Natalie Nougayrède was previously executive editor and managing editor of Le Monde.

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