Burkini Ban: Women In Burkas Paddle At Brighton Beach After French Controversy

There were no armed police and no one called it a provocation

While an online uproar was playing out over France’s controversial burkini ban yesterday, a different story entirely was unfolding on a British beach.

Taking advantage of temperatures tipping 30C, a group of burka-clad women descended upon Brighton for a paddle in the sea.

Some lifted up their hems while others simply waded into the cooling waters, mixing happily with other beachgoers.

Burka-clad women enjoying a paddle at Brighton beach on Wednesday
Burka-clad women enjoying a paddle at Brighton beach on Wednesday
Alamy
The images are a start contrast to what is occurring across the Channel on French beaches
The images are a start contrast to what is occurring across the Channel on French beaches
Alamy

Which is what occurred on a Nice beach on Tuesday.

The 34-year-old target, named by French news agency AFP as Siam, was photographed surrounded by officers who urged her to remove her long-sleeved blue top, in order to comply with the ban. [Many commentators have pointed out she was not even wearing a full burkini.]

As her daughter began to cry, Siam recalled nearby beachgoers applauding their actions, with some shouting at her to “go home”.

She was issued a ticket stating she was not wearing “an outfit respecting good morals and secularism.”

French laws also ban face-covering veils in public and headscarves in schools - based on views they violate French secularism and oppress women – which have alienated many among France’s 5 million Muslims.

The women were wearing burkas, not burkinis
The women were wearing burkas, not burkinis
Alamy

Reaction to the pictures and Siam’s story has been fierce, with many public and religious figures denouncing the spectacle of a woman being forced to partially disrobe while four armed men loom over her.

Members of the clergy are also amongst those asking whether the same ideology would demand nuns to remove their habits when entering the waters – illustrated with a number of pictures of habit-wearing nuns enjoying the sea.

One voice of support, however has been in the form of France’s former conservative president Nicolas Sarkozy.

Sarkozy, who announced this week he is running for the presidency again in next spring’s election, branded the burkini a “provocation” that supports radicalised Islam.

Nicholas Sarkozy has described the burkini as a 'provocation' that supports radicalised Islam
Nicholas Sarkozy has described the burkini as a 'provocation' that supports radicalised Islam
ASSOCIATED PRESS

In a TF1 channel interview, the 61-year-old insisted that Muslims in France are French people “exactly like any other ones” but, when living in the country, they must “assimilate” the French language and way of life, the French regions and the history of France.

Muslim people shouldn’t “impose their differences on the majority,” he added.

A burkini sit-in protest will travel from Britain to the French seaside commune of Le Touquet in September
A burkini sit-in protest will travel from Britain to the French seaside commune of Le Touquet in September
Facebook

Meanwhile a protest group originating in Britain intends to travel to Le Touquet in France on September 10 to hold a burkini sit-in protest.

The event, which is set to be repeated in Brighton, says: “We should stand in solidarity with French Muslim women and show that the majority of people do not care what they wear on the beach and are behind the traditional French values of liberté, égalité, fraternité which extends to citizens of a different religion. Women should have free agency to choose how they dress, it is not for the police to decide. Burkinis are suggested attire but come however you like!”

Aheda Zanetti said her original intention was to allow Muslim women to participate in Aussie beach life, and to give them a choice.

“No man in this entire world can tell us what to wear or what not to wear,” she said.

Close

What's Hot