Controversial ban: Women wearing burkas in France will face fines - but the areas around mosques will be exempt
The strict instructions, from Interior Minister Claude Guent, are contained in a nine page circular issued to officers prior to a full-blown burka ban coming into force next week.
With tensions running high within the country’s six million strong Muslim community, people have already been warned not to perform ‘citizen’s de-veilings’.
This means that members of the public will not be allowed to take the law into their own hands when they see a woman hiding her features in a public place.
Instead they will have to call the police, who will in turn consider whether the offender should be fined 150 euros, or around 132 pounds.
This will apply to all garments which cover the eyes, although scarves, hats, and sunglasses are excluded.
As well as a mosque, Muslims will also be able to put on a veil in the privacy of their own homes, a hotel room, or even a car, as long as they are not driving.
Police have already complained that they will have to waste time on ‘burka-chasing’, with Denis Jacob, of the Alliance police union, adding: ‘We have more important matters to be dealing with.’
Last year a woman in Paris was fined after ripping off a Muslim’s veil in a busy department store in the country’s first known case of ‘burka rage’.
The attacker said she had been hugely irritated by seeing a fellow customer shopping with all her features hidden.
The new ban, which will come into effect on April 11, will mean France is officially the second country in Europe, after Belgium, to introduce a full ban on a garment which immigration minister Eric Besson has called a ‘walking coffin.’
While women face the fines and ‘civic duty’ guidance if they break the law, men who force their wives or daughters to wear burkas will face up to a year in prison, and fines of up to 25,000 pounds.
An Interior Ministry source said: ‘The areas in and around mosques will be exempt from the ban.
Protests: Muslim women took to the streets of Paris over the weekend to voice their opposition to the ban
Posters have already gone up in town halls across France reading: ‘The Republic lives with its face uncovered.’
Belgium introduced a full ban last year, while one also looks likely in Holland, Spain and Switzerland.
There are no plans to introduce a similar ban in Britain, although politicians from the UK Independence Party and some Tory backbenchers have suggested one.
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