French council sacks summer camp workers for observing Ramadan fast

Jacques BourgoinFrance’s main Muslim body yesterday angrily condemned a town council’s decision to sack four summer camp workers for fasting during Ramadan as “arbitrary and discriminatory.”

The four workers, who had been employed temporarily by the town of Gennevilliers in the Paris suburbs to help run a sports camp in southwestern France, were dismissed on July 20, the first day of Ramadan, after being told they were endangering children’s safety by not eating or drinking between dawn and dusk.

They are now planning to contest their dismissal through France’s labour courts and the French Council of the Muslim Faith (CFCM) said Tuesday it was considering suing Gennevilliers council for discrimination.

In a statement, the Communist mayor of Gennevilliers [Jacques Bourgoin, pictured] defended the decision to suspend the employees on health and safety grounds after an official who visited the camp noticed that they were not eating or drinking at lunchtime.

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Alain Juppé against Islamophobia

In an interview with France Inter on 28 August, former prime minister Alain Juppé told Patrick Cohen that one of the fundamental points of cleavage between the candidates for UMP president was Islamophobia.

Last June in an interview with Jean Jacques Bourdin the mayor of Bordeaux had already expressed his disagreement with the Islamophobic politics that the UMP promoted. For him, respect for secularism is “respect for all religions”.

“My vision of French identity is quite clear”, the former UMP president stated. “These are republican principles”, “the principle of secularism” which “is not a war against religion, but respect for all religions”. “For me, one of the fundamental points of cleavage is the attitude towards Islam”, he continued. “Islamophobia that generalises the problems of that religion is contrary to the principle of secularism and the principle of republicanism. So this is for me an extremely sensitive question.”

He also said that one of the problems for the opposition party was that half of its activists and sympathisers find the ideas of the Front National compatible with their own. Alain Juppé appeared to be pointing the finger particularly at Jean-François Copé’s hostile positions towards Islam and Muslims, which pose a problem even inside his own party, provoking discord.

The manipulation of questions about Islam which we witnessed during the presidential election campaign, and which had the aim of winning votes from Marine Le Pen, appears to deeply disturb some of the highest ranking figures in the UMP.

Collectif contre l’Islamophobie, 28 August 2012

The French minister for women has let down Muslim voters

After the election of a Socialist government, and the appointment of a Muslim of North African heritage – Najat Vallaud-Belkacem – as minister for women’s rights, France’s Muslim community might have hoped for a reversal of Nicolas Sarkozy’s policy of pandering to Islamophobia, and in particular an overturn of the notorious “burqa ban”. So far they have been disappointed, writes Nabila Ramdani.

Comment is Free, 16 July 2012

Nouredine Rachedi’s attackers convicted of Islamophobic assault

Nouredine Rachedi (2)

Ajib and Al Kanz report that Nouredine Rachedi, who suffered a vicious attack by two far-right thugs back in 2008, has finally secured some sort of justice. The two men who attacked him, Kevin Lamadieu et Romain Blandin, have been convicted of religiously motivated asault. They each received suspended prison sentences of 15 minths and are required to pay damages of €15,000.

Nouredine Rachedi tweet

French Football Federation bans hijab despite green light from FIFA

FFF logoThe French Football Federation (FFF) said Friday that it would “not authorise players to wear a veil” while playing for France or in organised competitions, a day after world footballing authorities said the hijab could be worn on the pitch.

“Regarding the participation of female French national team players in international competitions on one hand, and the organisation of national competitions on the other, the French Football Federation reiterates its duty to respect the constitutional and legislative principles of secularism that prevails in our country and features in its statutes,” declared a statement from the FFF.

The FFF’s announcement came after a French MP had urged the government earlier on Friday to ban the Islamic headscarf for women soccer players.

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Women asked to remove headscarves at some French airports

Some French airports have begun to ask headscarf-wearing women to take off their scarves for security reasons, which has spurred criticism from Muslims in the country, who find the practice a discriminatory one.

The Collective Against Islamophobia in France (CCIF) has announced that Nantes Atlantique Airport has made it obligatory for headscarf-wearing women to take off their scarves and place them in the X-ray machine along with their other belongings.

The practice was put into effect two weeks ago by the SGA, the company responsible for Nantes Atlantique Airport’s security. Women affected by the new rules requested that they be allowed to take off their headscarves in a special room staffed only by women, but the request was denied. The women were told that they must place their headscarves on the conveyor going through the X-ray machine if they wanted to avoid missing their plane.

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Sarkozy claims Tariq Ramadan is campaigning for Hollande

Sarkozy candidacySarkozy told a French TV station this week that Tariq Ramadan, a controversial Muslim intellectual and Swiss national, supported Hollande. “This is a man who solicits votes for Hollande,” Sarkozy told the TF1 TV station, before adding, “And I have never heard Hollande say it bothers him”.

Not so, replied Hollande. “That is completely false,” said the Socialist frontrunner in an interview with the France Info radio station. “Tariq Ramadan, who does not even vote in France, has never mentioned my name.”

In a phone interview with FRANCE 24 Thursday, Ramadan denounced Sarkozy’s latest allegation, calling it “a mean and unacceptable lie”.

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French Muslim refused entrance to bank because she wore headscarf

Crédit Mutuel femme voilée

On the morning of Tuesday 19 June on her way to an appointment with her financial adviser, a woman wearing the hijab was refused entry to a Crédit Mutuel branch. The reason given: the employee required her to take off her headscarf. This action resulted in great indignation and a protest outside the offices of the bank. Crédit Mutuel officials quickly issued a statement expressing their regret and apologies for the “isolated mistake”.

Ajib, 22 June 2012

See also “Pas de voile au Crédit Mutuel”, CCIF, 21 June 2012

Cemeteries desecrated in Strasbourg: three skinheads receive prison sentences

Strasbourg graves vadalised2

On Wednesday in Strasbourg three youth from the skinhead movement received sentences of between 12 and 18 months in prison for desecrating three Jewish and Muslim cemeteries, in a stormy trial during which the families of the victims exploded in anger.

Nicolas Lecureur Matthias Leyer and Jonathan Husser, all aged 22, were charged with racially motived criminal damage and incitement to racial hatred. They faced the prospect of three years in prison.

The first two, described in the survey as “ringleaders” of these desecrations, were sentenced to 18 months in prison. After spending two months in custody last year, they appeared at the hearing and emerged from it at liberty, the criminal court not having issued a warrant.

The third, who was prosecuted for two of the three defilements, was sentenced to a year. He is currently detained for theft and remains in prison.

The three young were part of a group that often met in a square in Strasbourg “to booze” and did not hide their xenophobic ideas.

“I was stupid, an idiot. It was to make me look different, to make me interesting. I was not thinking of the consequences,” Matthias Leyer, the only one of the three defendants who admitted to the acts, stated at the hearing. “I was a skin from the age of 13 or 14,” said the young man, who was tattooed with a Celtic cross on his leg and “88” (for “HH”, “Heil Hitler”) on his wrist.

The hearing took place in a tense atmosphere. Many civil parties were present and police were deployed in large numbers to prevent possible outbursts.

The damage to a total of 90 graves took place between January and September 2010 in three different places of the city of Strasbourg. Headstones overturned, swastikas, the inscription “Juden Raus” (Jews out): the desecrations had provoked an outcry, including in the political world.

More than a year after the first incident, and after a long investigation, 16 suspects were arrested in March 2011. Nine were eventually prosecuted, three of whom were acquitted. The other three members of this gang, aged between 16 and 17 at the time of the first desecration, subsequently appeared before a juvenile court.

AFP, 20 June 2012

See also “36 Muslim graves desecrated in Strasbourg”, Islamophobia Watch, 24 September 2010

And “Strasbourg: 18 Muslim graves desecrated”, Islamophobia Watch, 29 June 2010