This article is more than
8 year oldIn a Sunday interview with La Croix, French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said that banning the burkini – full-body swimwear worn by Muslim women – nationwide would be “ineffective and unconstitutional.”
Ex-President Sarkozy, however, did not hesitate to respond to a reporter’s question on the issue, saying: “Well, then we change the constitution [to allow a burkini ban]. We've changed it 30-odd times, it's not a problem.”
A survey published by France’s TNS Sofres on Sunday showed that about 34 percent of supporters of the center-right Les Republicains party would vote for Sarkozy in the first round of the presidential primary set to take place in late November.
The burkini issue has ignited fierce debate in France, with divisions among politicians and the public over whether the swimwear should be banned.
Last week, France's top administrative court suspended a burkini ban imposed by the southern town of Villeneuve-Loubet. On Monday, cases were launched against four more towns to scrap the ban.
The complaints were lodged by the Committee against Islamophobia in France (CCIF), and involved the authorities of Nice, Menton, Frejus, and Roquebrune-Cap-Martin. The first hearing – regarding Frejus – is set to take place on Tuesday at the administrative court of Toulon.
Dozens of other French towns and regions which also imposed a ban on burkinis have expressed their outrage over the Villeneuve-Loubet ruling, saying their restrictions remain in force.
Henri Leroy, the mayor of Mandelieu-La-Napoule, told MailOnline that he had extended the ban until the end of September, saying that the Muslim residents of the town should be reminded that “they are French first and of Muslim confession second.”
Maybe if Muslims in France did not go around slaughtering French citizens then French citizens might feel more tolerant towards #burkini
— David Vance (@DVATW) August 29, 2016
Several members of the government have voiced their support for mayors who are in favour of burkini bans. In mid-August, French premier Manuel Valls said that the burkini is “not compatible” with the values of France, and that it was “the expression of a political project, a counter-society, based notably on the enslavement of women,” La Provence newspaper reported.@tonton_phil
— Space Cowboy (@wild4James) August 29, 2016
Burkini is the alternative to sunscreen cream... Not?
It's not necessary in Great Britain ;-)#smile
How does a woman wearing a burkini affect you? You have to do better, France.
— Olanma Hazel Mang (@hazel_Mang) August 29, 2016
French Minister for Women's Rights Laurence Rossignol echoed support for the burkini ban, saying that the outfit is“hostile to diversity and female emancipation.”
The first place to ban burkinis was Cannes on the French Riviera, with Mayor David Lisnard ruling that “access to beaches and for swimming is banned to anyone who does not have [bathing apparel] that respects good customs and secularism.”
The public has participated in a debate that has spread much farther than the borders of France.
@20Minutes
— ParisWalkingMan (@ParisWalkingMan) August 29, 2016
Dans le Finistère la température de l'eau justifie le burkini polaire.
Many have defended the ban, saying it is justified by the fear and insecurity felt in the light of terrorist attacks, and that France is above all a secular state.
Others have questioned the ban, using jokes to criticize the perceived injustice and level of attention given to the issue.
Newer articles