http://www.economist.com/opinion/displaystory.cfm?story_id=16108394

Banning the burqa
A bad idea......whose time may soon come in parts of Europe

May 13th 2010 | From *The Economist* print edition

WHEN Jack Straw, a British Labour politician, said a few years ago that he
would prefer Muslim women to uncover their faces during appointments with
him, because he “felt uncomfortable about talking to someone ‘face-to-face’
who [he] could not see”, liberal opinion was scandalised. He had no more
right to request this than he did to ask a teenager to take out a
tongue-stud or anything else that might offend middle-aged men: indeed,
arguably less because the covering was for reasons of faith, not fashion.
Today, however, some European governments are going further than Mr Straw
ever wanted to. Starting with Belgium and France, they plan to ban the
face-covering niqab or burqa altogether (see
article<http://www.economist.com/opinion/displaystory.cfm?story_id=16113091>
).

Europeans’ hostility to the burqa is understandable. It doesn’t just deprive
them of the beauty of women’s faces; it offends the secularism that goes
deep in European—and especially French—culture. Its spread goes hand in hand
with the growth of a fundamentalist version of Islam some of whose
proponents have attacked the secular societies they live in; and, at a time
when those societies feel under threat, the burqa makes it harder for police
to identify security risks.

For people raised outside the Gulf or Afghanistan, dealing with somebody
whose facial expressions are hidden is uncomfortable. Unlike the headscarf,
the burqa appears, in itself, to be a restraint on female freedom, and also
symbolises what many Europeans see as the repression that women can suffer
in Islam. And although many, and probably most, Muslim women wear the
headscarf out of choice, some tell the police that they were forced to wear
the burqa against their will.

Nor do democracies give absolute rights to citizens to wear what they like.
The consensus about what is tolerated and what deemed offensive or dangerous
varies. People cannot, in most countries, walk the streets naked. And
Europeans clearly favour a ban. A recent poll found that a majority backed
one in France (70%), Spain (65%), Italy (63%), Britain (57%) and Germany
(50%). In America, with its stronger culture of religious freedom, only a
minority (33%) was in favour.
Tolerate the burqa with pride

Yet the very values which Europeans feel are threatened by the burqa demand
that they oppose a ban. Liberal societies should let people wear what they
want unless there is a strong argument otherwise. And, in this case, the
three arguments for a ban—security, sexual equality and secularism—do not
stand up. On security, women can be required to lift their veils if
necessary. On sexual equality, women would be better protected by the
enforcement of existing laws against domestic violence than by the enactment
of new laws forcing them to dress in a way that may be against their will.
On secularism, even if Europeans would prefer not to have others’
religiosity paraded on the streets, the tolerance that Westerners claim to
value requires them to put up with it.

European governments are entitled to limit women’s rights to wear the burqa.
In schools, for instance, pupils should be able to see teachers’ faces, as
should judges and juries in court. But Europeans should accept that, however
much they dislike the burqa, banning it altogether would be an infringement
on the individual rights which their culture normally struggles to protect.
The French, of all people, should know that. As Voltaire might have said, “I
disapprove of your dress, but I will defend to the death your right to wear
it.”

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