国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

  .contact us |.about us
News > International News ... ...
Search:
    Advertisement
Muslim women march against scarf ban
( 2003-12-22 14:09) (Agencies)

Thousands of people, mainly Muslim women shouting "The veil, my choice," marched through Paris on Sunday against presidential proposals to ban Islamic head scarves from public schools and maybe at work, too.

The protest, a cry of anguish from a rarely heard section of French society, was the first in Paris against President Jacques Chirac's announcement Wednesday that head scarves and other conspicuous religious symbols, including Jewish skullcaps and large Christian crosses, should be banned from schools to protect French secularism.

Muslim women march against scarf ban
People demonstrate in Paris, Sunday, Dec. 21, 2003, to protest a planned law banning Islamic head scarves and other religious insignia in public schools. Poster reads 'My head scarf is my choice, my freedom, my reason for living.'  [AP]
Chirac urged parliament to pass the law before the 2004-2005 school year starts in September. He also proposed giving company bosses the right to decide whether religious symbols can be worn at work and said a law should stop patients from refusing care from doctors of the opposite sex — aimed at Muslim women who have rebuffed male medical workers.

Paris police put the number of marchers at 3,000. More than half were women, girls and even young children wearing head scarves. They marched in a boisterous, flag-waving column hundreds of yards long through rain to the Place de la Bastille, where the prison stormed at the start of the French revolution in 1789 once stood.

Protesters said Chirac's proposed measures stigmatized France's estimated 5 million Muslims, the largest Muslim community in Western Europe, and made a mockery of cherished French values.

"Liberty, equality, fraternity — apart from women who wear the veil," said Fatima Boicha, a housewife and mother of two from a town west of Paris whose head and neck were covered with a brown scarf.

"The French state wants us to submit, to tell us what to wear and what not to wear," she added. "None of these women here will take their veils off."

Protesters sang the Marseillaise, the French national anthem, waved French tricolors — red, white and blue — and shouted "Beloved France, where is my liberty?" and other slogans. Some held their identity cards above their heads or pinned enlarged photocopies of their voter cards on their chests to show their French citizenship.

"Proud to be French Muslims," read one banner. "I vote!" said other placards.

In Germany, Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder said in comments published Sunday that headscarves have "no place" among public school teachers. But unlike Chirac, Schroeder said he could not prevent Muslim school girls from covering their heads in the classroom.

Debate over banning Muslim teachers from wearing headscarves has occupied Germany since its highest court ruled in September that teachers could wear them, unless states pass laws forbidding it.

Protesters said it was the first time Muslim women had marched en masse in the French capital, although newspapers said there were similar protests Saturday in Strasbourg in eastern France and in Avignon in the south.

Marchers said they were furious that a report commissioned by Chirac and released this month suggested that some Muslim women are forced to wear head scarves by male relatives or to avoid being insulted by men in public.

"Ni frere, ni mari, le foulard on l'a choisi," the demonstrators shouted in a rhyming slogan that means: "I chose the head scarf, not my brother or husband."

Some women said they would move their children from public to private schools where the ban would not be implemented if the law is passed.

Others accused the government of pandering to France's extreme-right National Front in targeting Muslims and of failing to evolve with a French society changed by decades of immigration from North Africa and elsewhere.

"We are being undressed. We have no more freedom," said Djamila Bekioui, who wore a head scarf in the colors of the French flag. "We feel that we are considered second-class citizens."

 
Close  
   
  Today's Top News   Top International News
   
+WHO: Bird flu death rises to 15; vaccination recommended
(2004-02-05)
+Solana: EU ready to lift China arms embargo
(2004-02-05)
+Nation tops TV, cell phone, monitor production
(2004-02-05)
+Absence ... still makes China hot
(2004-02-05)
+Hu: Developing world in key role
(2004-02-04)
+WHO: Bird flu death rises to 15; vaccination recommended
(2004-02-05)
+Solana: EU ready to lift China arms embargo
(2004-02-05)
+US court clears way for gay marriages
(2004-02-05)
+Pakistan nuke scientist asks forgiveness
(2004-02-05)
+Sharon ready for referendum on scrapping settlements
(2004-02-05)
   
  Go to Another Section  
     
 
 
     
  Article Tools  
     
 
 
     
  Related Articles  
     
 

+Malaysia urges Muslims to unite Vs. Jews
2003-10-17

+WJC puts shelved EU anti-Semitism study on web
2003-12-03

+French panel favors ban on head scarves
2003-12-12

+French report backs ban on veil, skullcap, cross
2003-12-12

+Chirac expected to ban Muslim veil in French school
2003-12-17

+France to move swiftly on Muslim headscarf ban
2003-12-19

   
        .contact us |.about us
  Copyright By chinadaily.com.cn. All rights reserved  
林西县| 乌兰浩特市| 屏山县| 临洮县| 西藏| 嘉义县| 定西市| 剑河县| 开江县| 永州市| 焦作市| 绥芬河市| 东宁县| 红桥区| 墨脱县| 齐河县| 垣曲县| 麻江县| 松溪县| 连南| 德江县| 若尔盖县| 南城县| 托里县| 偃师市| 鄂温| 咸丰县| 北票市| 达孜县| 宁波市| 南木林县| 鹿邑县| 屏东市| 上栗县| 类乌齐县| 漳州市| 青神县| 科尔| 东阳市| 海丰县| 高邑县|