Texarkana Gazette

French court suspends ban on ‘burkinis’

- By Kim Willsher and Laura King

Los Angeles Times

PARIS—It’s about much, much more than swimwear.

The highest administra­tive court in France on Friday suspended one town’s ban on fullbody bathing suits—often called burkinis—in a closely watched ruling likely to set a legal precedent across the country.

The court declared that banning the body-concealing bathing apparel sometimes worn by observant Muslim women went against fundamenta­l civil liberties.

More than two dozen French towns have adopted a similar prohibitio­n—a chain reaction that sprang up in the weeks after a devastatin­g truck rampage in the Riviera resort city of Nice on July 14, Bastille Day, which left 86 dead and hundreds injured.

In France, home of Europe’s largest Muslim community, the bans have touched a social and cultural nerve, triggering highly fraught debate turning on national identity, security fears, immigratio­n, women’s rights and the social role of religion.

Most of the municipal bans cite the threat to public order as a concern; the court ruled that the existence of such a threat had not been clearly establishe­d— and that in its absence, the prohibitio­n could not be legally justified.

Friday’s ruling was limited in scope, affecting only the ban in the Mediterran­ean town of Villeneuve-Loubet—an opening salvo in what is likely to be a drawn-out legal and political fight.

The conservati­ve mayor of Villeneuve-Loubet, Lionnel Luca, denounced the ruling, saying it would inflame passions rather than calming them.

But opponents of the swimwear restrictio­ns hailed the decision. Abdallah Zekri, president of the National Observator­y against Islamaphob­ia, called it a “victory for the law and for wisdom.” Stephane Dujarric, a spokésman for U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, welcomed the ruling as a sign of “respect for personal dignity.”

This week, pictures of a woman in a headscarf and long tunic on a Riviera beach, surrounded by armed police and apparently being ordered to shed a longsleeve­d covering, touched off an online firestorm.

Police officials denied their officers had asked her to remove any clothing, but the widely shared photo drew expression­s of disapprova­l and incredulit­y from outside France.

Some supporters of the ban say traditiona­l Muslim standards of dress, including headscarve­s and face veils, are a means of oppressing women; many Muslim women have retorted that they should have the right to decide whether to cover up.

One of the groups that brought the case before the court, the Human Rights League, says other municipali­ties must also accept Friday’s decision. The court, known as the Council of State, asserted that banning the swimwear “seriously and clearly illegally” violated freedom of belief and individual liberties.

“It is a decision that is meant to set legal precedent,” said lawyer Patrice Spinosi, according to the Associated Press.

Several municipali­ties besides Villeneuve-Loubet also signaled defiance, suggesting that women in burkinis would continue to face fines.

Some national politician­s, including Prime Minister Manuel Valls, have defended the bans as adhering to the country’s system of strict secularism, while human rights groups and others describe them as scapegoati­ng of Muslims following a string of jihadist-style attacks.

Over the summer, France was deeply shaken by not only the slaughter in Nice, carried out by a Tunisian deliveryma­n, but also the killing two weeks later of a Roman Catholic priest celebratin­g Mass in northern France. The priest’s attackers were teenagers who had declared their loyalty to the militants of Islamic State.

The issue is already coloring next year’s elections. Conservati­ve former President Nicolas Sarkozy, seeking to unseat Socialist Francois Hollande, has voiced strong support for a nationwide burkini ban.

And Marine Le Pen, leader of the far-right National Front, demanded that lawmakers vote to widen a 2004 law banning the display of ostentatio­us religious symbols in classrooms, extending that prohibitio­n to all public spaces. Full-face coverings are already illegal in public places, including schools.

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