| The Dutch have reached a new level of authoritarianism |
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| Tuesday, 21 November 2006 | |
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The political hubbub that greeted Jack Straw's comments on the veil seems to have inspired a new continental fashion. Latest to join the fray is the Dutch government, which in the run-up to tomorrow's general election announced plans to ban the wearing of the burka and face veil in public. By doing so, it has raised what is becoming a Europe-wide campaign to a new level of authoritarianism. Naima Azough, a Dutch Green MP, points out that the ban would apply to fewer than 100 women. "This didn't come from public pressure," she says, "but was initiated by the immigration minister, Rita Verdonk, whose Liberal-Conservative party is scrambling for far-right votes." The result will simply reinforce the perception of Muslims that they will never be accepted in Dutch society. In Italy, the debate has been raging since the prime minister, Romano Prodi, was asked to comment on Straw's views. That followed a farcical TV show in which a rightwing MP, Daniela Santanchè, clashed with the imam of a Milan mosque on the subject. Santanchè has since been under police protection, convinced that the imam's statement that she didn't have the knowledge to comment on Islam amounted to a fatwa against her. "The veil is at best worn by 50 women in the whole country," says Hamza Ricardo Piccardo, spokesperson of the Italian Muslim Council, "and people in the street just don't care." Of course, the dress code of Muslim women was making headlines across Europe long before Straw weighed in. The wearing of the headscarf by teachers is already forbidden in schools in several German states. In Belgium, the minister-president of the Walloon-Brussels region last year authorised state schools to ban the headscarf. The result has been the creation of ghettoised schools. In each European country, veil mania seems to follow a similar pattern: a public statement by a prominent politician results in a frenzied political and media response, conveniently diverting attention away from unpopular government policies or political crises. France provided the political laboratory. In April 2003, the headscarf row came out of nowhere; within a year it had been outlawed in state schools. No serious demands to ban the headscarf had ever come from teaching bodies, students or the public. It simply wasn't seen as a problem before April 2003: of the 10 million students in French state schools, only 1,250 wore the headscarf. So who or what sparked "l'affaire du foulard"? Françoise Lorcerie, the editor of The Politicisation of the Veil in France, Europe and the Arab World, points the finger at France's interior minister, Nicolas Sarkozy, who, in a generally well-received speech to the Union of French Muslim Organisations in April 2003, sparked uproar in the hall when he reminded the audience that wearing the headscarf on national ID card photos was "unlawful". Within days, commentators and celebrities were demanding the banning of the headscarf in schools. In 2003, three French papers (Le Monde, Libération and Le Figaro) published 1,284 articles on the subject. By contrast, the hotly contested plan to reform social security - a genuine national debate that brought tens of thousands on to the streets - registered only 478 times. Responding to a climate of his government's own making, President Chirac set up the powerful Stasi commission, named after its Catholic chair, to investigate "how secularism could be enforced in the republic". MPs of all parties kept up the pressure, introducing parliamentary bills to ban the headscarf. Public opinion then turned, from being almost evenly divided at the start of the campaign to 76% in favour of a ban within a year. Partly as a result of this extraordinary diversion, the Raffarin government was able to face down large-scale public opposition to pension reform. For Pierre Tévanian, the author of Le Voile Médiatique, the headscarf "unveiled another genuine problem", later confirmed by last November's social explosion in the French suburbs: "an ingrained postcolonial racism that crosses all social divides and political formations, even the most progressive." Most alarmingly, the veil and headscarf debate intertwined seamlessly with issues of law and order, women's oppression and international terrorism. Until last week, the European debate had been confined to the idea of banning items of Muslim dress in public institutions. The Dutch government's proposed ban on both niqab and burka in all public spaces takes things to a new and disturbing level. The implication is clear: niqab or hijab-wearing women, and through them European Muslims, are being asked to submit not to the law of the land, but to each country's dominant way of life. The lesson of the French experience is compelling: the banning of the headscarf in schools in 2004 was never intended to make France a more integrated society. As well as the ban on "conspicuous religious symbols", the Stasi commission made 25 other recommendations for "promoting secularism and tackling discrimination", including the incorporation of slavery and colonisation in the teaching of French history. The government ignored almost all of them. The more governments and media foment hysteria over headscarves and niqabs, the more it seems a pan-European Islamophobic consensus is being built, as politicians search for scapegoats for social problems and pretexts to legislate in the "war on terror". The anniversary of the uprisings in the French banlieues is a reminder that this strategy will lead only to disaster. · Naima Bouteldja, a French journalist, is a researcher for the Transnational Institute Source: CiF Readers have left 7 comments.
I LOVE MUSLIMS:
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I URGE ALL MUSLIMS TO BOYCOTT DUTCH GOODS AND WIRTE TO THE MUSLIM COUNTRY'S EXPLAINING HOW "THESE DUTCH ANIMALS ARE TREATING OUR WOMEN", THEY GO TO MUSLIM LAND AND DRESS HOW THEY LIKE, YET THEY IMPOSE THEIR IDEOLOGY ON ONE OF THE WEAKEST SECTION OF THE COMMUNITY, MUSLIM WOMEN WITH NIQAAB. I HAVE RECENTLY GOT ABOUT 200 SIGNITAURES FROM MY COMMUNITY AND SENT OF MY CONCERN ABOUT THE DUTCH ANIMALS TO FEW ARAB AND MUSLIM STATES, I URGE ALL CONCERNED MUSLIM DO THE SAME, JUST MAY BE, JUST MAY BE SOMETHING GOOD MAY COME OUT OF IT.
(1)
2006-11-22 09:02:26
Kathy:
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It would seem that our European partners are jumping on Jack Straw's bandwagon and even trying to take it one step further by wanting to ban the niqab.
I find it so sad in these days of war in the Middle East and Afghanistan and so much poverty in Africa etc that European M.P's decide that the niqab is the useful tool with which to win elections. I dread to think where it will all end, hopefully not as it did the last time right wing extremists in Europe decided to demonise a Religious group. I thought we had all learned from that atrocity but it would appear not. Where is the European Parliament during this time with its Human Rights Acts? I agree we should perhaps boycott European goods and see how things will change. This boycott should also be done by Muslim countries who have the power to make change if they all speak together.
(2)
2006-11-22 15:09:47
Thinker:
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Just a point for you all to ponder:
What is the difference between banning smoking in public places and banning the wearing of a burqa in public? In both cases the rights of the individual have been limited. And, while you are trying to find a difference between the two, please realise that it was left-wingers who banned smoking and curbed people's freedoms.
(3)
2006-11-22 23:29:30
Colin:
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Kathy and Thinker: What's the Muslim PC take on Morocco and Turkey governments regulating female head coverings? Should Londinistan boycott trade with them?
(4)
2006-11-23 21:31:15
JAB:
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"The implication is clear: niqab or hijab-wearing women are being asked to submit not to the law of the land, but to each country's dominant way of life."
I'm amazed that this should be considered news or that it should be viewed negatively. Of course people are expected to adapt to and eventually (i.e. after a generation or two) adopt their host country's culture - that's desirable, whoever goes to whichever country. The fact that the alternative - sticking to the ways of the old country - stores up whole heaps of trouble should be blindingly obvious to anyone with a passing knowledge of 20th century European history. Love it or hate it, assimilation is ultimately the only safe route. Incidentally, your writer is incorrect in saying that "in April 2003, the headscarf row came out of nowhere"; it was a high-profile issue when I was living in Paris in the early 90s.
(5)
2006-11-24 08:39:33
Utbah:
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Colin, if you like that country why don't you go there? Briton is a free country, where people can speak freely (freedom of expression), to practice their religion.
If you don't like Briton or it's values go to Turkey or Moroco. I'm sure they will treat you with respect, and let you practce your religion.
(6)
2006-11-25 00:12:48
jacky:
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Muslims should adopt the culture and laws of their 'chosen' country and also respect the religion of that country.
In my opinion Muslims create their own barriers to integration. Time the religion of Islam entered the modern world.
(7)
2006-12-10 11:47:42
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