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After French law on
Muslim headscarves, Italian village bans the burqa
By Peter Popham in Milan
26 September 2004
Italy's reputation for religious tolerance was in the balance last
week after a ban on women wearing burqas instigated in a tiny
Alpine village began spreading across the country.
An Italian woman who converted to Islam nine years ago and took to
veiling her face after performing the Haj, the pilgrimage to
Mecca, has received two fines from the authorities in the village
where she has lived all her life.
Sabrina Varroni, 34, converted after marrying her Moroccan
husband, with whom she has four children. There are 10 other
Muslims in the village, but she is the only who wears the veil.
The mayor of Drezzo, the 1,000-strong village near the Swiss
border where she lives, has strong views on such practices.
A member of the xenophobic and separatist Northern League,
Cristian Tolettini found two laws on the books to help him stamp
them out: one passed under Mussolini's fascist rule in 1931,
banning the wearing of masks in public, and another dating from
1975, at the height of the Red Brigades scare, forbidding the
wearing of items that disguise a person's identity. And he has
instructed local police to enforce them.
As a result, last week Drezzo's only policeman handed Ms Varroni
two penalty notices on successive days, each for about £25: once
when she was waiting at the bus stop for her children to come home
from school, once in the municipal office.
The following day she seemed likely to get another if she didn't
remove her veil. Instead she stayed indoors.
Despite the evident absurdity of a village woman known to all the
other inhabitants being fined for setting foot outside her home,
Mr Tolettini defends his action. For Ms Varroni to go around
wearing the burqa, he said, was "a continual and conscious
violation of the law" which was "not a question of principle but
of correctness. The law of '75 was enacted in light of the
terrorism of the Red Brigades, and today too it seems to me that
reasons of security are not lacking."
Through a lawyer, Ms Varroni said: "I have been wearing the veil
for years, I am Italian, raised in Drezzo, and I have never done
any harm to anyone. Why are they so furious with me?"
The assault on the right to wear the burqa has been condemned as
"an ignoble act of persecution" by left-wingers. Michele Ainis, a
legal expert, told the newspaper Corriere della Sera that the law
enacted under Mussolini was "one of the most fascist laws in 20
years of fascism", and that he was sure Italy's Constitutional
Court would overturn this application of it. But this week Mr
Tolettini's initiative began spreading.
Mario Borghezio, a Northern League MEP, said the burqa deserved to
be banned because it is "a symbol of the most obscurantist type of
Islamic fundamentalism" and has become a "symbol of death" because
some of the women involved in the Beslan massacre were veiled.
In parliament, the Minister for Parliamentary Relations, Carlo
Giovanardi, told MPs that the ban would be enforced. And in a
village near Treviso, in the Veneto region, a Bangladeshi woman
wearing a burqa was challenged by a policeman in the street and
taken to the police station, where she removed it.
Source:
Independent.co.uk |