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By Alan
Quartly
BBC News, Brussels
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Naima Amzil is fully
integrated in Belgian society
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"You are a bad Belgian and you have
signed your own death warrant."
That was the message to factory owner Rik
Remmery when he opened his mail one morning just before Christmas.
For ex-policeman Rik it was only the start
of an angry and chilling tirade of threatening post.
Further letters put a 250,000 euro
($326,000; £173,000) price on his head and a final package
contained a bullet.
By now the letters were coming to his
family home as well as his factory. "December," another letter
read "will be a nightmare." The death threats against Rik were
caused by one simple fact - he employed a Muslim woman who wore a
headscarf to work.
Somebody, somewhere in the small town of
Ledegem in West Flanders did not like that and was prepared to
take extreme action unless Rik sacked Naima Amzil.
But Rik stood firm.
"She's worked here for eight years. I
accepted her with a headscarf and I will not change my mind
because of one sick person," he said.
Removing the scarf
Naima was horrified when she found out
about the threats. She could not believe someone would react to
her simple white headscarf in such a manner.
Originally from Morocco, she had done
everything possible to integrate into Belgian society - speaking
French and Dutch and carrying a Belgian passport.
Police have failed to find
the author of the hate letters
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Her work colleagues rallied around her.
The Unizo union of independent employers organised an internet
petition of support which eventually racked up more than 25,000
names.
But as the letters kept coming, the
pressure and fear grew. In the end, with the police at a dead end
in their investigation, Naima decided to act.
She removed her headscarf to work on the
factory floor. Health and safety regulations meant she wore a
hairnet at work anyway and that allowed her to stay true to her
religious beliefs.
Royal sympathy
It was a traumatic action to undertake.
She cried for hours that day.
"It was very, very difficult. It was like
a piece of me was taken away. The whole day I felt bad," said
Naima.
Naima wore a hairnet instead
of the headscarf at work
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Belgium's King Albert was on holiday in
France and saw a report about events in Ledegem on television. He
contacted the factory and invited Rik and Naima - in headscarf -
to the royal palace for a televised audience.
For the king, it was important to send a
message out that religious intolerance was unacceptable.
Naima and Rik's story is symptomatic of
the suspicion and extremism rearing its head against many of
Europe's Muslims.
In other parts of Belgium, political
pressure is forcing local police to enforce rules that are hard to
explain to the Muslim community.
Police vigilance
In Antwerp - a city with a 50,000-strong
Muslim community - police can now reprimand, or even imprison,
women found dressed in the burka (full body covering) on the
streets of the city.
The police stress that this is an old
regulation - originally designed to stop people covering their
faces completely in masks at carnival time. It is all about public
safety.
"When you're patrolling as a police
officer, you should see the faces of people. Because if you can't
see the faces, you don't know who it is, what they want to do,"
said commissioner Francois Vermeulen of Antwerp police.
"If you put on a Mickey Mouse mask and you
start walking around in Antwerp, you will be stopped by the
police. It's that simple. It's not only women in a burka or a
headscarf and a veil."
But the police admit that the women they
have stopped for this reason do not know about, or do not
understand, the statute.
Back in Ledegen the police are still at a
loss. The threatening letters have stopped for the time being, but
the unpleasant feeling of a home-grown extremism remains.
"In a small town like this, everybody
knows everybody. I think it must be a skinhead, a neo-Nazi, a
neo-fascist, someone like that. I really don't know," said Rik.
On the factory floor, Naima is hard at
work packing prawns and other delicacies produced by the factory.
She is still putting on a brave face.
"When I arrived here in my headscarf Rik
said it was no problem. I never thought there would come a time
when I would take it off. Now I just hope there'll be a day when I
can come back to work with my headscarf on again."