French cabinet backs
scarf ban
The French cabinet has approved a
law banning Islamic headscarves and other religious symbols in state
schools.
The move comes before a parliamentary
debate starting on Tuesday, which is expected to end in the law's
approval.
The bill follows an official report
on state secularism which was backed by President Jacques Chirac.
Large crucifixes, Jewish skullcaps
and other signs of faith - probably including Sikh turbans - will also
be banned if the proposals become law.
The bill proposes that
"in schools, junior high schools and high schools,
signs and dress that conspicuously show the religious affiliation of
students are forbidden."
Protests
Mr Chirac told the closed cabinet
meeting that France needed to act to head off danger to the nation's
secular foundations.
"To do nothing would be
irresponsible. It would be a fault," he said, according to government
spokesman Jean-Francois Cope.
Not acting would mean "leaving
teachers and school principals alone in the face of growing
difficulties", he added.
The bill has its first reading before
the National Assembly, parliament's lower house, on Tuesday.
The proposals have led to protests by
Muslim groups in France and around the world.
Many of France's five million Muslims
see it as an attack on their religious and human rights.
'Misguided'
But Mr Chirac's stand reflects
popular opinion in France where some 70% of the electorate have said
they back a ban on religious symbols in schools.
French opposition Socialists have
described the proposals as misguided and unclear.
Former education minister Francois
Bayrou, of the Union for French Democracy (UDF) - the coalition partner
of Mr Chirac's Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) - said he would oppose
the law because "the disadvantages outweigh the advantages".
"We have just given the Islamists and
the militant fundamentalists a massive gift of gold," he said on RTL
radio.
28 January, 2004
Source: BBC
French back headscarf ban
PARIS: Nearly four in five of the
French support laws barring Muslim headscarves in public places
including schools, and a narrow majority of people in Germany and the
Netherlands view such regulations as a good idea, international polling
found. Since this fall, French public school students have been barred
from wearing head scarves or other highly visible religious attire to
class.
A survey by the Pew Research Centre showed strong
French backing for such laws - 78 per cent - as the students said they
have an unfavourable view of Muslims, compared to 64pc
favourable.
15 July 2005
Source:
Gulf Daily News
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