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Rights group to take action after Cannes burkini ban

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A French human rights group has said it will oppose a ban on burkinis in courts after the seaside city of Cannes barred the full-body, head-covering swimsuits worn by some Muslim women.

“Ten women have asked us to sue the town of Cannes,” Marwan Muhammad, the executive director of the Collective Against Islamophobia in France, said in a statement posted on the group’s Facebook page on Friday.

“We are currently conducting interlocutory action against Cannes.”

Citing security concerns, Cannes Mayor David Lisnard issued an ordinance forbidding beachwear that did not respect “good morals and secularism”, the AP news agency reported.

Swimwear “manifesting religious affiliation in an ostentatious way, while France and its religious sites are currently the target of terrorist attacks, could create risks of trouble to public order”, added Lisnard, who has called the burkini “the uniform of extremist Islamism”.

The burkini prohibition is in effect until August 31, officials said. Those who violate the new rule risk a $42 fine.

The ban was also criticised by anti-racism group SOS Racisme, which attacked what it said was the mayor’s “strategy of tension”.
France remains in a state of emergency after a series of attacks on the capital, Paris, the southern city of Nice and on a Catholic church in the northwest of the country.

The ban also follows the cancellation of a one-day private pool day event in Marseille for Muslim women who choose to wear burkinis while swimming.

The water park hosting the event decided to cancel the planned event earlier this week after politicians on the both the right and the left criticised the initiative.

French law already forbids face-covering veils anywhere in public, and headscarves in public schools. Proponents say the laws preserve France’s secular values and protect women from religious oppression.

However, critics argue such laws deepen the religious divide.

“Not a day goes by without the target of Muslims, especially Muslim women in France,” Yasser Louati, a human rights and civil liberties activist, told Al Jazeera from Paris on Friday.

“There is a feeling now that France is at war with its own citizens. Today they are Muslims, and yesterday they were Jews,” said Louati. “French elites cannot live in peace with minorities.”

[Source: Al Jazeera]
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