Council of Europe opposes bans on Muslim face veils
STRASBOURG (Reuters) - The Council of Europe human rights watchdog said on Wednesday it opposed an all-out ban on full face veils, under consideration by some European states, but also urged Muslims to reject customs that deny women equal rights.
The Council's Parliamentary Assembly unanimously passed a resolution saying all-out bans on full veils in public would deny a basic right to women who wanted to cover their faces.
It qualified that right by saying veils, also known as burqas and niqabs, could be banned when public security or professional obligations required women to show their faces.
France, Belgium and Spain are considering a ban on full face veils in public and may outlaw them later this year. The Council's resolution has no legal weight against national laws.
Very few women among Europe's estimated 15 million Muslims wear them, but some politicians have made them into a symbol for all problems in assimilating some Muslims into European society.
The Assembly resolution said "a great majority of European Muslims share the principles at the basis of our societies" and deplored discrimination against them, including Switzerland's ban on minarets voted in a referendum last November.
At the same time, it called on Muslims in Europe "to abandon any traditional interpretations of Islam which deny gender equality and limit women's rights ... Women are equal to men in all respects and must be treated accordingly."
The veiling tradition "could be a threat to women's dignity and freedom" and "no woman should be compelled to wear religious apparel by her community or family," it said.
The resolution drew a distinction between the religion of Islam and the Muslim political movement known as Islamism that does not accept the separation of church and state that it stressed was fundamental to European democracies. Continued...
