France/Belgium: Women's organizations want burka ban

France/Belgium: Women's organizations want burka ban

In Paris, sixty activists of Ni Putes ni Soumises made an early start on International Women's Dyy by marching with liberty caps in the place de la République, and then symbolically covering the statue there with a giant burka (picture here), later removed by the police. They were protesting what they see as a delay in enacting the law against wearing the burka in public places. Sihem Habchi, president of the organization, told AFP that they do not want the anti-burka law to be buried.



Source: Figaro (French)


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The telephone has not stopped ringing at the offices of “Insoumise et devoilée” (Defiant and unveiled)," located in Verviers, in southern Belgium. "In the past two weeks, sixteen young women have reached out to us," says Karima, who is visibly overwhelmed by her work. When in 2008 she founded the organisation, named after a book she published the same year, Karima never imagined things would evolve so quickly. "It’s proof my story is not an isolated case, as some politicians suggested," she jokes.


Born in Belgium to a large Moroccan family, Karima was forced to wear the veil from the time she was nine. "They ended up sewing it to my hair," she confides. Treated like a maid by her family, she was cloistered, mistreated and forcibly married in Morocco; an existence she managed to escape from, and recount in her autobiography. She says she wrote her story for the girls and women who face the same ordeals.


Today, Karima's organisation strives to provide women who are seeking a fresh start with a network of host families. "When we receive a call for help, we respond immediately, because often the courage doesn’t last," she says. Her work also takes her to schools, town hall meetings and television programmes.



Her long-term goal is to achieve a ban on headscarves in public institutions. In Flanders, a law imposing such a ban was adopted in September, 2009. But in Wallonia and Brussels, lawmakers are yet to examine the issue.


The two main parties, the Socialist Party (PS) and the Christian Democrats (CDH), are reluctant to move forward on the matter. The first fears a ban would alienate part of its electorate -- Belgium counts 400,000 Muslims -- and the latter advocates a "reasonable accommodation" modelled on policies in the UK and the US.


"Privately, the politicians support us; in public they drop us," explains Karima.


(more)


Source: France24 (English)

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