The incident happened on October 3. A veiled Muslim woman was ejected from a major Paris opera house after she refused to uncover her face.
France’s Socialist
government today, October 20, pledged to toughen up its anti-face covering law.
A spokesman for France’s
Ministry of Culture said it was ‘producing a new set of rules’ to make sure the
so-called ‘burka ban’ was better enforced in theatres, museums and other public
institutions.
In an incident which has
divided opinion in the city’s liberal arts community, cast members performing
La Traviata ‘objected strongly’ to the presence of a woman in the audience
wearing a niqab-type veil. So far unnamed, she is believed to be a well-off
woman from a Gulf State, and was attending the performance with a friend.
“A singer spotted her in
the front row during the second act,” said Jean-Philippe Thiellay, director of
the Bastille Opera.
“Some performers said they
didn’t want to sing,” said Mr Thiellay, who confirmed that she was kicked out.
However, other opera lovers
in a city historically renowned for its tolerance were less impressed.
“What possible harm could a
woman sitting quietly in the audience with face covered do to anyone?” said Guy
Laurent, a regular at the Bastille Opera.
“The woman would clearly
have felt utterly humiliated by what happened – French culture should be more
tolerant.”
Women living on housing
estates on the outskirts of major cities like Paris are regularly criminalised
with a fine, but this is the first incident of someone being ejected from an
artistic venue.
Technically the woman now
faces a fine of just over £180, although there is not thought to have been any
police involvement.
The woman and her friend
were not refunded any of their ticket price.
France,which is home to
some five million Muslims, was the first European country to ban the full-face
Islamic veil in public places. Belgium followed suit soon afterwards, but there
is no veil ban at all in Britain, despite calls by a minority of right wing MPs
for one.
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