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Politics

Hundreds protest 'burqa ban' in Denmark

August 2, 2018

Activists denounced Denmark's ban on full face coverings, saying it unfairly targeted Muslims and represented an encouragement of anti-immigrant sentiments. Muslims make up about 5 percent of Denmark's population.

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Protesters in Copenhagen hold a sign that reads "my clothes, my choice"
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo/Ritzau Scanpix/M.C. Rasmussen

Some 1,300 Danes gathered on Wednesday in Copenhagen and Denmark's second-biggest city of Aarhus to protest the new ban on face veils on the day that the controversial law went into effect. Activists have denounced the government for infringing on women's rights to choose how to dress.

The law was enacted by the Danish parliament in May, and its proponents have rejected the notion that it represents a ban on religious clothing.

Read more: Full-face veil ban: How laws differ across Europe

Protesters in Copenhagen wore the niqab veil, which covers the whole body except the eyes, the all-enveloping burqa, and other face coverings. Demonstrators marched from the central district of Norrebro to Bellahoj police station on the outskirts of the capital, where they formed a human chain.

The rally lasted three hours. Protesters included a mix of Muslim and non-Muslim Danes, chanting slogans such as "no racists in our streets" and "my life, my choice."

Demonstrators with full face coverings in Copenhagen
Demonstrators with full face coverings would not be fined during the protest, police saidImage: picture-alliance/AP Photo/Ritzau Scanpix/M.C. Rasmussen

Sabina, a 21-year-old student who did not wish to disclose her full name, was wearing a niqab at the march and explained to Reuters why she was speaking out against the law.

"We need to send a signal to the government that we will not bow to discrimination and a law that specifically targets a religious minority," Sabina said.

Read more: Column: I'm an Arab woman; am I oppressed?

Muslims make up around 5 percent of Denmark's population of 5.7 million. Of these, Sabina is one of approximately 150-200 Muslim women in the country who wear either the niqab or burqa and are directly affected by the ban.

Protesters also marched in Denmark's second-biggest city of Aarhus
Protesters also marched in Denmark's second-biggest city of AarhusImage: picture-alliance/NurPhoto/A. Klug

Under the law, police will be able to order women to remove their veils or leave public areas. The women will also face fines of 1,000 Danish crowns ($160, €138) for a first offense, rising to 10,000 crowns for a fourth.

Authorities said that the fines would not be applied to the veiled women during the protests since certain uses of face veils, such as to exercise freedom of speech as part of a peaceful protest, are exempt from the law.

Both Muslim and non-Muslim Danes attended the protest
Both Muslim and non-Muslim Danes attended the protestImage: picture-alliance/AP Photo/Ritzau Scanpix/M.C. Rasmussen

Amnesty — law harms freedom

Critics see the law as encouraging anti-immigrant sentiments, pointing to the very small number of Muslim women in Denmark who actually wear face coverings.

"If the intention of this law was to protect women's rights, it fails abjectly," said Fotis Filippou, deputy Europe director of Amnesty International.

"Instead, the law criminalizes women for their choice of clothing — making a mockery of the freedoms Denmark purports to uphold," Filippou added.

Supporters of the law argue instead that the ban enables better integration of Muslim immigrants into Danish society.

Read more: ECJ headscarf ruling and its consequences

With the ban, Denmark now joins Austria, Belgium, the Netherlands, Bulgaria, the German state of Bavaria and France, all of which have passed similar measures to curb face coverings.

jcg/rc (Reuters, AFP)

Denmark bans full-face veils

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