Italy approves draft law to ban burqa
Law moves country closer to joining France, Belgium and parts of
Spain in outlawing face-covering in public
Associated Press in Rome
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 3 August 2011 02.54 BST
Under the new Italian law wearing a niqab would be illegal. Photograph: Julien Warnand/EPA
An Italian parliamentary commission has approved a draft law banning women from
wearing veils that cover their faces in public.
The draft, which was passed by the constitutional affairs commission on Tuesday, would
prohibit women from going in public wearing a burqa, niqab or any other garment that
covers the face. It would expand a decades-old law that for security reasons prohibits
people from wearing face-covering items such as masks in public places.
Women who violate the ban would face fines, while third parties who forced women to
cover their faces in public would be fined and face up to 12 months in jail.
Italy is the latest European country to act against the burqa. France and Belgium have
banned the wearing of burqa-style Islamic dress in public, as has a city in Spain. The
Belgian law cited security concerns.
The Italian law was sponsored by Souad Sbai, a Moroccan-born member of Silvio
Berlusconi’s conservative Freedom People party who said she wanted to help Islamic
women integrate more into Italian society.
“Five years ago no one wore the burqa [in Italy]. Today there is always more. We have to
help women get out of this segregation … to get out of this submission,” Sbai said in a
telephone interview. “I want to speak for those who don’t have a voice, who don’t have
the strength to yell and say: ‘I am not doing well.'”
The spokesman of an Islamic group said banning the Islamic veil “is unjust and touches
individual liberty”.
“This topic continues to be a sort of criminalisation and media dramatisation. In Italy
there aren’t even 100 women who wear the niqab and not even one who wears the
burqa,” Roberto Hamza Piccard, spokesman for the Union of Islamic Communities in
Italy, was quoted by the news agency Ansa as saying. He said such a ban would isolate
devout Muslim women, who would not be able to leave their homes.
Ansa said the main opposition party voted against the law. The draft will be forwarded
after the summer recess to parliament, where Berlusconi’s governing coalition has a
narrow majority.
The preliminary approval was welcomed by lawmaker Barbara Saltamartini, vicepresident of the Freedom People party caucus in the lower house.
“Final approval will put an end to the suffering of many women who are often forced to
wear the burqa or niqab, which annihilates their dignity and gets in the way of
integration,” Saltamartini said.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/aug/03/italy-draft-law-burqa/print 8/4/2011
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