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Kenza Drider, French Presidential Candidate, Targets Ban Of Veil

Kenza Drider

ELAINE GANLEY   09/22/11 12:47 PM ET   AP

PARIS — Kenza Drider's posters for the French presidential race are ready to go, months before the official campaign begins. There she is, the "freedom candidate," pictured standing in front of a line of police – a forbidden veil hiding her face.

Drider declared her longshot candidacy Thursday, the same day that a French court fined two women who refuse to remove their veils. All three are among a group of women mounting an attack on the law that has banned the garments from the streets of France since April, and prompted similar moves in other European countries.

They are bent on proving that the ban contravenes fundamental rights and that women who hide their faces stand for freedom, not submission.

"When a woman wants to maintain her freedom, she must be bold," Drider told The Associated Press in an interview.

President Nicolas Sarkozy strongly disagrees, and says the veil imprisons women. Polls show that most French people support the ban, which authorities estimate affects fewer than 2,000 women who wore the veil before the ban.

Drider declared her candidacy Thursday in Meaux, the city east of Paris run by top conservative lawmaker and Sarkozy ally Jean-Francois Cope, who championed the ban.

"I have the ambition today to serve all women who are the object of stigmatization or social, economic or political discrimination," she said. "It is important that we show that we are here, we are French citizens and that we, as well, can bring solutions to French citizens."

Two other women arrested wearing veils in Meaux – while trying to deliver a birthday cake to Cope – were fined in court Thursday, one euro120, the other euro80.

They want to push their case to the European Court of Human Rights.

"We cannot accept that women be punished because they are openly practicing their religious convictions. We are demanding the application of European rights," said one of those convicted, Hind Ahmas.

With Islam the second religion in France and numbers of faithful growing, there are worries that veiled Muslim women could compromise the nation's secular foundations and undermine gender equality and women's dignity. There are also concerns that practices like wearing full veils could open the door to a radical form of Islam. Lawmakers banned Muslim headscarves in classrooms in 2004.

Few Muslim women in France cover their faces. Most who veil themselves wear the "niqab," a filmy cloth attached to the headscarf that covers all but the eyes. The law also affects the burqa, with just a mesh covering over the eyes, worn largely in Afghanistan.

Belgium passed a similar face veil ban that took effect in July, and the Netherlands announced Friday it has drawn up legislation to outlaw Muslim face veils. A draft law has been approved in Italy.

In France, the veil ban was also seen as a political maneuver by the unpopular Sarkozy's conservative UMP party, which Cope chairs, to entice deeply conservative and far-right voters.

Flouting the French measure outlawing face veils in all public places can lead to a fine of euro150 and, in some cases, citizenship classes. However, thus far there have been few legal consequences.

According to the Interior Ministry, 146 women have been given citations by police but only a handful have reportedly been forced to take the next step – appear before a judge for a possible fine. The Justice Ministry says figures are not yet available.

"I tried to understand this law and what I understood is that this is a law which puts us under house arrest," Drider said, referring to women who choose to stay home rather than remove their face veils, or risk arrest.

What the law has done, she says, is give citizens the right to insult veiled women.

Drider and others say that many women who refuse to remove their veils become shut-ins rather than go outside and risk a citation, or insults. One woman in a long black robe was seen recently in a chic Paris neighborhood wearing a surgical mask on her face – one of several tricks developed to get around the ban.

Drider, 32, who has worn a face veil for 13 years, hasn't shirked from denouncing the ban in the past. She was the only veiled woman to testify before an information commission of lawmakers studying a potential ban before the law was passed.

With four children, Drider says she goes about the southern city of Avignon, where she lives, facing down insults but left alone by police.

Ahmas, 32, from Aulnay-Sous-Bois, a northeast Paris suburb, looked for trouble when she tried to deliver an almond cake to Cope, the mayor of Meaux, with another veiled woman. The gesture was not without a touch of humor: in French, "almond" sounds like "fine."

The women, while intent on showing the power behind the veil, have a male backer. Rachid Nekkaz, a wealthy businessman revolted by the street ban, has promised to pay fines for women sanctioned for breaking the law. With his association, Don't Touch My Constitution, he heads Drider's support committee for the presidency.

For Nekkaz, the Meaux case will be the first in France in which a conviction for veiled women could stick. He wants to see an appeal eventually go to the highest French court, then on to the European Court of Human Rights and calculates that this could happen in 2014.

Drider has obstacles to overcome, too, like getting 500 mayors to back her candidacy, a requirement for anyone running for the presidential elections in April and May. With more than 36,000 mayors in France, she thinks this is doable – despite her status as a lawbreaker.

Both women insist that neither Drider's candidacy for the presidential race nor the Meaux court case are a provocation because their aim is to set aright a measure they say has skewed French values and compromised women's rights.

"My candidacy is to say the real problem in France is not us ... The real problem in France is really women's freedom ... whatever their religion," she said. "So let's not focus on what I wear. Let's deal with the real problems. My candidacy is really for that, to say don't stop at what I wear but go much deeper."

___

Jeffrey Schaeffer in Meaux and Nicolas Garriga contributed to this report.

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PARIS — Kenza Drider's posters for the French presidential race are ready to go, months before the official campaign begins. There she is, the "freedom candidate," pictured standing in front of ...
PARIS — Kenza Drider's posters for the French presidential race are ready to go, months before the official campaign begins. There she is, the "freedom candidate," pictured standing in front of ...
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11:55 PM on 10/05/2011
It's unfortunate to see a country like France, with it's long history of revolution, ban something of religious significance such as this. While there are compelling arguments on the side of identification and integration, outright fines and arrests do more to incite and anger the people rather than discourage them. A state, plainly and simply, should not be built upon it's ability to define a culture of it's people but upon the ability to allow it's people to grow and prosper. When a state represses any group, as France has seen in the past, the people take action. Given the volatility of the Western world's relationship with Islam, this could be seen as a provocative maneuver, and who is to say that there aren't more discriminatory measures yet to be put in place? As I've read, the leader of the socialist party has already denounced the Islamic ritual of prayer as it occurs in the streets, labeling it as an impedance to the French people, rather than suggesting alternatives. Muslims may not respond in the radicalism that is so often stereotyped to their religion, but one can only imagine that they'll take to the streets, and I'm interested in seeing how the French people react to that. Like it or not, a Muslim French citizen is still a French citizen, and should be treated just the same as the rest.
07:53 PM on 09/24/2011
I am from Denmark and it is a democracy where the majority rule applied as in most democracies, we also do not allow Burquas, Hijabs, Wetsuits etc to be worn at work, in private we do not care you can do whatever you like.
France is also a democracy and it has decided what it will tolerate, and if you do not like it, you can either debate it and fight it in the context of the democratic processes or you can choose to adhere to the rule of law or you can leave the country.
The protest in France would be equivalent to a protest in Saudi Arabia NOT to wear it. TRY THAT and see what the consequences would be, France we know a fine, Saudi? Your head on a tray!
09:51 AM on 09/27/2011
you are wrong. Christian women in Saudi are allowed to show their faces and even their hair. Only muslim women must wear burqas (or abayaa).
09:29 AM on 10/01/2011
I did not make references to Christian women I SA, I made reference to Muslim women, so I am not wrong after all we are not debating the rights of Christian women are we ? I have lived and worked in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia so no need to lecture me, thanks.
09:00 AM on 09/24/2011
I am 100% for womans rights, which includes banning the Burqua and Hijab, whether it is in Europe, Canada or the USA. If you feel you need to cover yourselves than you should go back and live in the Middle East, especially Saudi Arabia, where you can have the pleasure of being fully covered from head to toe every and anytime you leave your home. Oh, you'll need a male to accompany you for even the smallest of tasks, going to the market ect...You will not be permitted to drive either. Ban the Burqua & Hijab!!! When I traveled in Saudi Arabia I had to be fully covered in 105 degree heat, I could barley see and felt like I could not breath. IT WAS HORRIBLE, but I was in their country, following THEIR customs. If you want freedom in Europe, Canada or America a woman must be uncovered. If you feel this is infringing on your freedom go back to the Middle East and see what freedom feels like there, as I am sure you know, which is why you left in the first place. Love, Freedom and Peace To All Woman & Men who we share our brief lives on Earth with!!
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Yank in France
Rien se cree tout se transforme
03:05 AM on 09/23/2011
It is good that the French convert to Islam, Kenza Drider, is running her "freedom" campaign.

No, I absolutely do not agree with her, but I do believe we need to have an airing of views relating to multiculturalism.

So what is wrong with women wearing full facial and body garb?

Nothing. But does society have an obligation to accept a practice that entails women "effacing" their physical identity?

Some would give a resounding YES, but I stand with those who say every concept, in this case, tolerance, has its limits. Like democracy itself, each society has a right to decide what it considers to be "acceptable".

I do not want to live in a society where huge numbers of women wear full facial and body garb, especially, given the obscurantist tradition it represents. And yes, despite what the PC crowd would have use believe, more and more women in France are wearing the niqab. You can see it in the 18th, 19th and 20th districts of Paris: just check out the main Metro stations, which are swarming with such individuals!

So I respect Muslims and Islam but do NOT want to live in anything resembling an Islamic country, and MAKE NO MISTAKE ABOUT IT, the people promoting the niqab are promoting a radical and intolerant version of Islam!! If you do not believe it, let's talk because the evidence is just overwhelming!

As for my Muslim friends, I know that many of you feel the anti-niqab lab is discriminatory but it is not: it is simply a choice of society, which every nation exercises, especially the Muslim ones. So why not Europe?
10:57 PM on 09/22/2011
Can't we approach this problem from a teleological standpoint? What is the essence of western culture, or more specifically, French culture? The identity and solidarity of French people, most of whom share a common heritage and culture, would be forsaken in the 21st century by the decision to be led by someone with such a radically different worldview.
10:43 PM on 09/22/2011
I really have a problem with this and this coming from a guy who currently resides in Jeddah! As a Western I am use to talking with a person face to face to do otherwise leds me to believe that one is being evasive.
I have worked for over 2 years with females here and I have no idea their names since I cannot tell one from the other, only their shoes is a give away!
I was made to adjust when I came here. My wife was made to adjust and we did. I expect no less from them when they come to Europa. Why they would want to be in Europa is beyond me. If you want to be fully veiled move to Pakistan!
08:00 PM on 09/22/2011
Should I be banned from wearing a cross to *represent* my Catholic faith because it's what the Crusaders did?

*(which the hijab does not even do for Islam, as it is a tradition that existed centuries before Islam in Mesopotamia)*

If you want the freedom to do what you do, you must give others the same respect. If you want to restrict, expect to be restricted.
09:09 AM on 09/24/2011
I am all for freedom of religion, forms of expression and freedom of speech ect...hoever wearing a cross is nothing like wearing the Burqua or Hijab. You can only imagine how restrictive it is. I was made to wear a Burqua at all times while in Saudi Arabia. It was really awful it was over 105 degrees, but I was respecting their customs, well really I didn't have a choice. If I were to go in public not fully covered I would have been arrested. If being covered is part of your practice, then perhaps it needs to be practiced back in the Middle East. Europe, Canad and the US are NO PLACE for the Burqua or the Hijab!!
06:23 PM on 09/22/2011
Don't those women know they're scaring the children walking around with masks when it's not Halloween?? Those veils are not representative of freedom, they're representative of some control freak guy making women live under his rules....some which even still today can be very abusive towards women. It's not natural - they gotta go!!
04:03 PM on 09/22/2011
We like to know whom we're dealing with. In New York this week masked demonstrators were arrested for being masked. See? It's not just France.

In any event, if you really need to be wearing this headgear then probably France is not for you.
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LiamMc
02:53 PM on 09/22/2011
The Quran and the Laicite have something in common: neither require wearing of a facial veil.
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omobob
left coast, usa
01:19 PM on 09/22/2011
French President Sarkosy cares not for the liberty nor protection of these Islamic women. These are but a few thousand of naturalized French citizens who have committed non crimes, have done nothing wrong. The banning of the burga helps the anti-immigration xenophobes who voted Sarkosy to power. The fact that banning the burga will only restrict these women and raise their own personal misery index is lost on the bigoted and discriminatory law. Sarkosy made zero attempts to meet with and discuss this law with the French Islamic Population. There are laws in France that prevent anyone from walking into a bank with their face covered. This lAw is punitive and discriminates against women who are blameless. a shocking disregard for their personal rights and safety as Sarkosy has made these women targets of bigotry and hate should they be "caught" in public wearing a burga. The land of liberty is far from liberty as one can get by dictating dress codes fro a few but not for all. Quell distasteful.
02:07 PM on 09/22/2011
Liberals are the bigots. They support radical Islam, which would force women to wear burqas. You are a misogynist and Islamofascist.
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Yank in France
Rien se cree tout se transforme
04:02 PM on 09/22/2011
I disagree strong with omobob, but he is not a misogynist or an Islamofascist. Throwing insults at people add NOTHING to what should be a political discussion!
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bc82
German know-it-all on the loose
02:44 PM on 09/22/2011
"The land of liberty is far from liberty as one can get by dictating dress codes fro a few but not for all."

How far could a woman in a burqa walk down a street in the US before someone calls in a bomb squad?
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omobob
left coast, usa
06:00 PM on 09/22/2011
> How far could a woman in a burqa walk down a street in the US before someone calls in a bomb squad?

Fear, intolerance and ignorance is no excuse to label anyone as a threat. It’s profiling and its as un-American as you can get. In America you are innocent until proven guilty. Not one of these French Nationals has committed any crime. Not one, and yet they are persecuted and singled out.
10:30 PM on 09/22/2011
For good reason!
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elsquibbs
Socially liberal, fiscally prudent atheist.
11:53 AM on 09/22/2011
I don't think it's right for the French government to ban the veil, but the veil itself is a tool of submission. It always has been. Trying to spin it differently is silly.