Businessman vows to pay fines for women defying burkini ban in France

PARIS, France – A French-Algerian businessman has challenged a ban on Muslim women’s full-body swimwear, known as burkini, saying he would pay the penalty for any woman who was charged for defying t

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PARIS, France – A French-Algerian businessman has challenged a ban on Muslim women’s full-body swimwear, known as burkini, saying he would pay the penalty for any woman who was charged for defying the law.

Rachid Nekkaz, said he has decided to pay the fines of any women breaking the partial law, which came into force on July 28 and runs until August 31 at some French beaches.


Nekkaz, who has so far paid three fines of €38, said some politicians are taking advantage of some terror attacks in the country to try to reduce the number of freedoms, a move that he described as “unacceptable, inadmissible and intolerable.”

“And I don’t accept that these great countries such as France, Belgium, Switzerland or the Netherlands and now Germany, take advantage of this fear of Islam to reduce the number of personal freedoms,” he added.

Germany also intends full-face veils in any place where identification is required, according to Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere, who said the move is aimed at promoting security and national cohesion.

Nekkaz, 44, argued that while the full-body swimwear is not a threat to freedom of others or the security of the country, nobody has the right to prevent Muslim women from wearing it.

France, which has become the first European country to ban public wearing of the full-face Islamic veil (burqa) in April 2011, has banned the full-body swimwear this summer.

For breaking the burkini ban, one will face fines of €38 ($42), said the mayor of the French city of Cannes.

Those, who break the law of burqa ban, have to pay fines of €150 ($205) or do public service duties.

WHAT TO TAKE AWAY FROM THIS ARTICLE:

  • Nekkaz, who has so far paid three fines of €38, said some politicians are taking advantage of some terror attacks in the country to try to reduce the number of freedoms, a move that he described as “unacceptable, inadmissible and intolerable.
  • Nekkaz, 44, argued that while the full-body swimwear is not a threat to freedom of others or the security of the country, nobody has the right to prevent Muslim women from wearing it.
  • “And I don't accept that these great countries such as France, Belgium, Switzerland or the Netherlands and now Germany, take advantage of this fear of Islam to reduce the number of personal freedoms,” he added.

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Linda Hohnholz

Editor in chief for eTurboNews based in the eTN HQ.

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