 |
Asked if the ban should apply to the Jewish skullcap, known as the kippah or yarmulke, as well as Muslim headwear, Marine Le Pen, leader of the extreme right National Front party, said: "It is obvious that if the veil is banned, the kippah is banned in public as well."
|
|
|
| Page tools |
 |
|
|
|
|
|
PARIS (AFP)---French extreme-right leader Marine Le Pen called Friday for a ban on wearing Muslim veils and Jewish skullcaps in public, adding to religious tensions sparked by cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed.
In an interview with the Le Monde newspaper, Le Pen called for religious headwear to be banned "in stores, on public transport and on the streets."
Asked if the ban should apply to the Jewish skullcap, known as the kippah or yarmulke, as well as Muslim headwear, she said: "It is obvious that if the veil is banned, the kippah is banned in public as well."
She later sought to clarify her remarks by saying "the kippa does not pose a problem in our country". However, she called upon French Jewry to make "this little effort, the small sacrifice" to put everybody on an equal footing and rebut the charge that a ban on the veil represented Islamophobia.
Le Pen, who shocked the French elite by winning almost 18 percent in the first round of this year's presidential vote, also repeated calls for bans on public prayers, kosher and halal foods in schools and foreign government financing of mosques in France.
President Francois Hollande denounced her comments, saying: "Everything that tears people apart, opposes them and divides them is inappropriate and we must apply the rules, the only rules that we know, the rules of the Republic and secularism."
Jean-Francois Cope, who leads the right-wing UMP party of former president Nicolas Sarkozy, said Le Pen showed little understanding of France's much-vaunted secular traditions.
"Marine Le Pen wants to ban any signs of religion on the street, starting with the veil and the kippah. By doing this, she shows she understands nothing of secularism. Secularism is not the eradication of all religious expressions in society," he said.
Richard Prasquier, who heads France's main Jewish representative group CRIF, said the statement showed there were "secular fanatics just as there are religious fanatics.
"Obviously, I am hostile to both," he said.
The main Muslim council CFCM said the far-right icon wanted to "set up a totalitarian regime in France."
France was on alert at home and abroad on Friday following the publication of the obscene cartoons of the Prophet by satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo on Wednesday.
Muslim leaders were calling for calm and urging militants not to defy a ban on protests in France over the cartoons.