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"I am confident that a new law on hijab would be the best solution to such a controversial issue," said Raffarin
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By
Hadi Yahmed, IOL Correspondent
PARIS,
October 18 (IslamOnline.net) – French Prime Minister Jean-Pierre
Raffarin reiterated on Friday, October 17, his support for passing a
law banning hijab in French schools, as his Interior Minister Nicolas
Sarkozy asserted that French Muslims must respect the country's
secularism.
Speaking
to the members of the
French Muslim Council, Raffarin said "all kinds" of
hijab should be banned in state schools.
"France
has proved that it has all powers to impose this decision and this
what happened recently," he said, referring to the expulsion of
two Muslim sisters, Lila and Alma Levy, from their school after they
refused to take off their hijab.
The
two sisters were
expelled from Henri Wallon lycee in the Paris northern suburb
of Aubervilliers, after the school claimed they were wearing clothes
"of an ostentatious character."
"I
am confident that a new law on hijab would be the best solution to
such a controversial issue," the premier argued, hinting at a
report on secularism and religion to be submitted to President Jaques
Chirac by the end of this year.
Chirac
set up the secularity commission in July to rule on whether new
legislation was needed to handle a growing debate over religion in
schools, particularly Muslim schoolgirls wearing hijab.
Raffarin
made no bones about Islamophobia phenomena, which had its toll on
Muslims in France "just like anti-Semitic incidents."
He
asserted that Islam poses no threat to the French society, adding that
there was a dividing line between "Islam (as a religion) and some
Islamic groups."
"France
holds Islam in great esteem," said the premier.
Last
month, Raffarin underlined
that there would be no room for religious symbols such as hijab in
French educational institutions.
Respect
Secularism
For
his part, Sarkozy asserted that French Muslims must respect the
principles of secularism in France.
"No
to hijab in schools when it has an ostentatious character…And to
hijab inside state-run offices," Sarkozy told the French magazine
Le Nouvelle Observateur Friday.
But
he voiced anew his opposition to the hijab-banning law, warning it
would provoke a backlash among Muslims, who would view it as an
"insult and punishment."
"Are
we expected to pass a new law when it comes to harassment?"
Sarkozy wondered. "Hence, we are required to pass a myriad of
laws."
The
minister stressed that his opposition to the new law did not mean he
totally rejected it.
Sarkozy
noted he would support such legislation if dialogue with Muslims ended
in nothing and hijab became "an organized movement" and not
personal.
He
said French-born Muslim girls wear hijab because either it makes them
feel secure in some districts, or as a sign of confirming their Muslim
identity.
Speaking
to the French Muslim Council on October 13, Sarkozy suggested a bandana
as a possible alternative to hijab.
The
issue of hijab was become the center of heated debates between a
sizeable and increasingly assertive Muslim minority in several
European countries and the long tradition of secular education in the
continent.
So
far, most countries do not have any specific legislation on whether or
not hijab can be worn in schools or other public establishments.
Major
exceptions are Turkey, whose founder Ataturk banned hijab as part of a
sweeping plan of modernization.