WASHINGTON: France's plans to ban the full-face veil in public have not placed NATO troops in Afghanistan in greater danger, French Defense Minister Herve Morin said Thursday. French and other...
By
AFP
|
September 17, 2010
WASHINGTON: France's plans to ban the full-face veil in public have not placed NATO troops in Afghanistan in greater danger, French Defense Minister Herve Morin said Thursday.
French and other forces in the US-led coalition already were under serious threat in the war, and the French parliament's backing for a law barring Muslim veils such as the burqa or niqab (face veil) would not make a difference, Morin told reporters after talks at the Pentagon.
"The risk and the threat are constant... and I don't have the feeling that this fundamentally changes things," he said when asked about the proposed ban. "When you are at the maximum ... you can't go beyond that."
The French parliament passed a law Tuesday banning the wearing of a full-face veil in public, meaning a ban will come into force early next year if it is not overturned by senior judges.
The move has triggered criticism in some Muslim countries, with Islamic authorities in Asia warning that the planned ban could spark a terrorist backlash.
Morin, however, said that Paris had heard "no reaction from any Arab capital city on this subject."