The Dutch minority government plans to ban face
veils such as burqas and other forms of clothing that cover the face
from next year.
The
ban would make the Netherlands, where 1 million out of 17 million
people are Muslim, the second European Union country to ban the burqa
after France, and would apply to face-covering veils if they were worn
in public.
“People
should be able to look at each other’s faces and recognise each other
when they meet,” the interior affairs ministry said in a statement on
Friday.
The
ban will also apply to balaclavas and motorcycle helmets when worn in
inappropriate places, such as inside a store, Deputy Prime Minister
Maxime Verhagen told reporters, denying that this was a ban on religious
clothing.
Few
Muslim women in the Netherlands wear the Arabic-style niqabs which
leave the eyes uncovered and Afghan-style burqas that cover the face
with a cloth grid. Academics estimate the numbers at between 100 and
400, whereas Muslim headscarves which leave the face exposed are far
more common.
The
coalition has agreed to submit a new law to parliament next week
stipulating that offenders would be fined up to 390 euros, the ministry
said.
Verhagen
said the ban was intended to ensure that a tradition of open
communication cherished in Dutch society was upheld, and to prevent
people from concealing their identity in order to do harm.
Maurits
Berger, professor of Islam in the contemporary West at Leiden
University, said only a few hundred women wear the full face veil in the
Netherlands.
“This
is highly symbolic, it’s part of the deal made with PVV,” Berger said.
“We are in the middle of a crisis. There are worse things to tackle.”
The
minority coalition is at odds with the Freedom Party over where to make
further budget cuts, and the scale of the cuts needed.

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