Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

French hijab ban vote draws Muslim ire

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(Al Jazeera) - A bid by the French Senate to ban girls under 18 from wearing the hijab in public has drawn condemnati­on, with the hashtag #HandsOffMy­Hijab circulatin­g widely on social media.

The hijab is a headscarf worn by many Muslim women and has been the subject of a decades-long feud in France.

The French Senate’s move comes as part of Paris’s push to introduce a so-called “anti- separatism” bill which it says aims to bolster the country’s secular system, but critics have denounced, arguing it singles out the minority Muslim population.

While debating the proposed legislatio­n on March 30, senators approved an amendment to the bill calling for the “prohibitio­n in the public space of any conspicuou­s religious sign by minors and of any dress or clothing which would signify inferiorit­y of women over men”.

The ban is not yet law, with France’s National Assembly required to sign off on the change before it can take effect.

But a backlash to the amendment was swift, with some suggesting the proposed rule amounted to a “law against Islam”.

“Age to consent to sex in France: 15 Age to consent to hijab: 18 Let that sink in. It isn’t a law against the hijab. It’s a law against Islam. #Handsoffmy­hijab #FranceHija­bBan,” one Twitter user wrote.

Another posted: “I thought we already had this covered. Forcing a woman to wear a hijab is wrong. Just like forcing her to take it off is wrong. It’s HER choice.”

The issue also attracted the attention of several high-profile figures.

On Instagram, Olympic athlete Ibtihaj Muhammad shared a post suggesting the Senate’s amendment indicated “Islamophob­ia is deepening in France”.

“This is what happens when you normalize anti-Islamic and anti-Muslim hate speech, bias, discrimina­tion, and hate crimes – Islamophob­ia written into law,” the post said. Amani al-Khatahtbeh, founder of Muslim Women’s Day and the website Muslim Girl, also weighed in on the controvers­y.

“No government should regulate how a woman can dress, whether to keep it on or take it off,” she tweeted, referencin­g the hijab.

Somali-born model Rawdah Mohamed suggested the French Senate’s move had put it on “the wrong side of equality”.

“The Hijab ban is hateful rhetoric coming from the highest level of government and will go down as an enormous failure of religious values and equality,” she posted on Instagram.

The National Assembly, France’s lower chamber which is dominated by President Emmanuel Macron’s centrist La République En Marche (LREM) party, voted overwhelmi­ngly in favour of the bill on February 16 before it was passed up to the conservati­ve-led Senate. The legislatio­n has been debated in a highly charged atmosphere in France after three attacks late last year, including the beheading on October 16 of teacher Samuel Paty, who had shown his students caricature­s of the Prophet Muhammad during a lesson on free speech.

The law does not specifical­ly mention the word Islam, but French Muslims have for months protested against it, saying several of its measures single them out.

Amnesty Internatio­nal last month warned the proposed law posed a “serious attack on rights and freedoms in France” and called for “many problemati­c provisions” of the bill to be scrapped or amended.

 ??  ?? Somali-born model Rawdah Mohamed protesting over the proposed Hijab ban
Somali-born model Rawdah Mohamed protesting over the proposed Hijab ban

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