Imperial Valley Press

Danish govt: Minister’s views on fasting Muslims are her own

- BY JAN M. OLSEN

COPENHAGEN, Denmark — Assertions by Denmark’s immigratio­n minister that Muslims fasting for Ramadan pose a safety hazard in some jobs do not represent the views of the country’s government, a spokeswoma­n for the ruling coalition said Tuesday.

Integratio­n Minister Inger Stoejberg faced growing criticism over a blog post published Monday that urged residents observing a month of dawn-to-dusk fasting to take leave from work “to avoid negative consequenc­es for the rest of Danish society.”

Karen Ellemann, chief whip of the Liberal Party, said Tuesday after an ordinary party meeting that Stoejberg’s remarks were not a formal proposal to change the law. Ellemann added that fellow party member Stoejberg “had the right to start this debate.”

Others within the party distanced themselves from the minister’s comments. Senior Liberal Party member Jacob Jensen wrote on Facebook that “maybe we politician­s should focus on finding solutions to the real problems first.”

“I don’t agree with Inger Stoejberg,” Jensen said, adding that politician­s should not interfere with employers’ internal affairs.

In her blog for tabloid BT, Stoejberg questioned how “commanding observance to a 1,400-year-old pillar of Islam” was compatible with modern labor markets. She cited bus drivers as an example of workers whose performanc­e could be negatively affected by forgoing food and drink.

Last week, millions of Muslims around the world began observing Ramadan, a holy month of intense prayer, fasting during daylight hours and nightly feasts. Some 250,000 Muslims are estimated to live in Denmark, a country with a population of 5.7 million.

Stoejberg’s remarks were met by a barrage of people saying she was wrong and lacked any basis for her claims.

Ozlem Cekic, a former lawmaker with Denmark’s left-wing Socialist People’s Party, said the airing of her opinions was “a sad way to start the Ramadan” and “contribute at digging deeper and deeper trenches” within the society.

Law student Tarik Ziad Hussein said Stoejberg “assumes a lot” but has little knowledge of Islam and “reduces Muslims to being children who can’t think for themselves”

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