France meets Muslim leaders, experts after burkini row

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AP Paris
Last Updated : Aug 29 2016 | 9:13 PM IST
France's interior minister convened Muslim leaders today to discuss a French-style Islam that honours the nation's secular values, a task given new urgency after deep divisions surfaced over burkini bans in 30 French beach towns and after terror attacks that also stigmatised Muslims.
A high court struck down the burkini bans Friday, but the high-pitched debate that quickly seeped into France's political sphere revealed raw tensions between the secular establishment and sectors of France's estimated 5 million Muslims, the largest Muslim population in Western Europe.
The July 14 attack on revellers in Nice, the killing of a priest in Normandy on July 26 and the June killing of a police couple in their home - all claimed by the Islamic State group - have focused tensions on Muslims.
Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve warned in an interview with France's Roman Catholic newspaper La Croix that if the political class cannot unite all French "the dynamics of division may prove dangerous."
However, he ruled out drafting a national law banning burkinis.
The daylong conference bringing together Muslim leaders, civil society and others is the latest step in creating an "Islam of France" that respects French secular values.
Muslims must be "committed to a total defence of the Republic in the face of terrorism, in the face of Salafism," Cazeneuve told the paper, adding French values must "transcend all others."
In France, the interior minister is charged with maintaining good relations with religious denominations.
"What is at stake is very important," said Abdallah Zekri, who heads the Observatory Against Islamophobia. "Firstly, we must end the arguments over the burkini, which make no sense."
He told reporters that some people wanted to use burkinis to stigmatise Muslims, while politicians looking to France 2017 presidential race seized the issue "for vote-catching reasons."
He also contended that humiliating Muslims "has facilitated the work of Daesh (Islamic State) recruiters" of vulnerable Muslim youth.
More French Muslims have joined the ranks of Islamic State militants than from other European nations - with at least 600 French citizens in Syria or Iraq, 160 killed and 1,800 either considering or en route.
So far this year, France has expelled 15 foreigners considered a threat - six in August and more than 80 since 2012. Some 20 mosques or prayer rooms considered imbued with radicalism have been closed in recent months.

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First Published: Aug 29 2016 | 9:13 PM IST

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