
A Spanish town has become the first in the country to ban Muslims from using public facilities to celebrate religious Eid festivals just weeks after a nearby area was rocked by anti-migrant riots.
The controversial ban was passed in
Jumilla, a town in the Murcia region with a population of around 27,000, Mail
Online reports.
The motion was proposed by Spain's conservative People's Party (PP) and backed by the hard-right Vox party. It prohibits the public facilities such as sports halls and civic centres being used for 'religious, cultural or social activities alien to our identity' unless officially organised by the local council.
It comes less than a month after
several people were left injured during anti-migrant rioting in Torre Pacheco,
just 70 miles from Jumilla, when a pensioner was reportedly beaten up by three
Moroccan men.
A 68-year-old man told Spanish
media he was beaten up in the street on July 9 by three young men of North
African origin.
The local Vox party openly
celebrated the decision, declaring on X:
'Thanks to Vox the first measure to ban Islamic festivals in Spain's public spaces has been passed. Spain is and will be forever the land of Christian people'.
The move prevents Muslims in
Jumilla from gathering in public gyms or civic buildings to celebrate Eid
al-Fitr, which marks the end of Ramadan, and Eid al-Adha, the Islamic festival
of sacrifice.
Muslim leaders have condemned the
decision.
Mounir Benjelloun Andaloussi
Azhari, president of the Spanish Federation of Islamic Organisations, said the
ban was a direct attack on the country's Muslim population, calling it
'Islamophobic and discriminatory'.
'They're not going after other
religions, they're going after ours,' he told Spanish newspaper El Pais.
Referring to the recent rise of
racist rhetoric and attacks, he added: 'We're rather surprised by what's
happening in Spain. For the first time in 30 years, I feel afraid.'
Legal experts have warned the ban
could face a constitutional challenge. Article 16 of Spain's constitution
grants freedom of religious belief, with the only restriction being the
protection of public order.
The Socialist leader of Murcia,
Francisco Lucas, accused the PP of stoking division.
'The PP violates the constitution
and puts social cohesion as risk simply in the pursuit of power,' he said on X.
Former Jumilla mayor Juana Guardiola, also from the Socialist party, condemned the rhetoric behind the ban. 'What do they mean by identity? And what about the centuries of Muslim legacy here?,' she said.
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