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World / Americas

UN urges French towns to drop 'burkini' bans

Published: 30 Aug 2016 - 03:02 pm | Last Updated: 08 Nov 2021 - 02:58 am
Peninsula

A woman wearing a burkini walks in the water August 27, 2016 on a beach in Marseille, France, the day after the country's highest administrative court suspended a ban on full-body burkini swimsuits that has outraged Muslims and opened divisions within the government, pending a definitive ruling. REUTERS/Stringer

By Fatih Erel
GENEVA: The UN has weighed in on France’s ‘burkini ban’ controversy, urging the seaside towns at the heart of the dispute to repeal their restrictions on the concealing swimwear.
Speaking on Tuesday in Geneva spokesman for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Rupert Colville, said they backed Friday’s decision by France’s top court to overturn the ban.
Colville called on the local authorities in the country’s seaside towns and resorts to repeal the ban which France’s Council of State said "constitutes a grave and illegal breach of fundamental freedoms".
He also called on local representatives defying the Council of State’s ruling to drop their bans.
"We urge all remaining local authorities which have adopted similar bans to repeal them immediately, rather than exploit the limited geographical scope of this particular decision in order to keep their highly discriminatory bans in place until the end of the current holiday season," he said.
"According to international human rights standards, limitations on manifestations of religion or belief, including choice of clothing, are only permitted in very limited circumstances, including public safety, public order, and public health or morals," he added.
About the burkini ban, which came into effect after the July 14 Nice terror attack, Colville said: "These decrees do not improve the security situation but rather fuel religious intolerance and the stigmatization of Muslims in France, especially women."
"When the bikini was first introduced on beaches, people were being summoned and issued fines for showing too much flesh. Now, it is the opposite. Now, they are being summoned and fined for wearing too much clothing, it makes no sense," Colville added.

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