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Bowing to threats in Belgium,
Muslim quits her job
The Associated Press, Agence
France-Presse
Friday, March 4, 2005
BRUSSELS In a discrimination case
watched across Belgium, a Muslim has resigned from her job in a
food processing company after a series of death threats against
her employer from a shadowy extremist group because she was
habitually wearing a head scarf on the job.
The case has gained notoriety throughout Belgium since the first
of seven threatening letters arrived in November.
The woman, Naima Amzil, and her employer had been called heroes
for refusing to cave in to demands from a group calling itself New
Free Flanders.
Even King Albert II received Amzil and the company owner, Rick
Remmery, at the palace to show his support.
Amzil, 31 years old, is originally from Morocco. The authorities
say it is unclear why she was singled out by the extremists.
"I can assure you that we put all means at the disposal of the
investigators to catch the perpetrators and the investigation will
not stop until the moment we catch them," Prime Minister Guy
Verhofstadt said.
Intolerance toward Muslims in Western Europe has sometimes turned
into violence as the popularity of the extreme right continues to
rise.
Amzil decided to quit Wednesday when she heard of the latest
letter, which contained two bullets and warned that "the execution
is being prepared again.”
It added that Remmery's products would be poisoned. "Now it has
become too much," she told television news. "I can't take it any
more."
Remmery, who employs 50 people in rural West Flanders, pleaded
with Amzil to stay but said "the pressure had become too much for
her." She promised to return to work if the case is resolved. "If
the perpetrator gets caught, I will certainly return to work," she
said.
The equal opportunities minister, Christian Dupont, said she
understood Amzil's decision. She added: "It is a scandal that the
person making these threats remains comfortably at home."
Filip Dewinter, leader of the anti-immigration Flemish Interest
Party, also condemned the threats, saying that Amzil's resignation
showed "democracy loses to blackmail."
Unizo, the union of independent employers, which gathered over
25,000 signatures in support of Amzil and Remmery, also expressed
its disappointment.
"This is a bad signal," said Ronny Lannoo, a Unizo spokesman. "The
people behind this will now see that it works."But he added that
everyone understood the emotional duress Amzil was under.
In the letters, Remmery has been threatened with arson and murder.
One put a price of €250,000 on his head, or nearly $350,000.
Remmery refused to dismiss the worker or demand that she remove
her head scarf.
One morning, Amzil removed it herself, saying she did not want to
endanger her colleagues. Still, the letters kept coming.
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