A Muslim Frenchwoman says she was fined and faced racial abuse for wearing a hair-covering veil on a Cannes beach.
The woman, a Toulouse native named only as Siam, was strolling on the beach while on holiday with her two children.
She
said she was told by three police officers that her clothing was "not
correct". Meanwhile, she says, a crowd gathered, some shouting: "Go
home!"
The Cannes mayor earlier this month banned full-body swimsuits known as "burkinis" from the beach.
David
Lisnard said they were a "symbol of Islamic extremism" and might spark
scuffles, as France is the target of Islamist attacks.
The working of his ruling suggests it could be applied to any "beachwear which ostentatiously displays religious affiliation".
In this case, Siam, 34, says she was wearing not a burkini but a hijab covering only her hair, along with leggings and a tunic.
"I wasn't intending on bathing, just dipping my feet in the water," Siam told L'Obs news website (in French).
Approached
by the police officers, Siam says they asked her whether she was aware
of the order in force in Cannes, and she said she had not followed it
closely.
She says she was then told that beach users had to wear
"proper dress". The officers suggested she could remain on the beach if
she rearranged her scarf as a headband around the head.
She refused, and was fined €11 (£9.45; $12.45) - a fine which, reports suggest, she will contest.
Siam says that by this point a crowd had gathered, and although some
defended her, others began applauding the police, telling her to "go
home" and saying "Here, we are Catholic!"
This account was confirmed by a journalist who also came across the scene.
"Racist speech was completely unleashed," Siam said. "I was stunned."
"Because of people who have nothing to do with my religion have killed, I no longer have the right to go to the beach!"
Siam
said she thought hard before going public about the incident, which
happened on 16 August, but "could not let it go in our country".
"Today we are forbidden from the beach. Tomorrow, the street?"
Approached
for comment by AFP news agency, Mayor Lisnard insisted women wearing a
"simple veil" should not be booked by police, but said he had no reason
to believe the fine had been imposed improperly.
"If this woman believes she has been unjustly booked, which unfortunately can still happen, she must contest it," he said.
(BBC)

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