Morocco bans burqas due to ‘security concerns’, say reports

Government has been trying to foster more moderate expressions of Islam

A woman wearing a niqab (full face cover) walks next mannequins with Islam appropriate clothes and headscarves (hijab) at a market at al-Ghoria neighbourhood of  old Cairo, Egypt. According to local media, Morocco has banned the production and sale of full-face veils (burqas). Photograph: Khaled Elfiqi/EPA
A woman wearing a niqab (full face cover) walks next mannequins with Islam appropriate clothes and headscarves (hijab) at a market at al-Ghoria neighbourhood of old Cairo, Egypt. According to local media, Morocco has banned the production and sale of full-face veils (burqas). Photograph: Khaled Elfiqi/EPA

Morocco has banned the burqa, the full-body veil worn by some conservative Muslim women, according to local media reports.

Although the government did not confirm the ban, the reports said vendors and merchants had been notified on Monday by representatives of the interior ministry that they would no longer be allowed to sell or manufacture the religious garment because of security concerns. They said they were given a 48-hour deadline, but it was unclear when the rule would take effect.

Morocco, a majority-Muslim country and former French protectorate where the influence of western secularist ideals remains, has been trying to foster more moderate expressions of Islam and subtly warn Islamists not to go too far, although acts of extremism remain rare.

The government of King Mohammed VI may have conceived the ban as a gesture to get that point across. Relatively few Moroccan women wear the burqa, which is much more common in conservative Muslim societies like Afghanistan and Pakistan, but many do wear traditional dresses and head scarves.

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In any case, by targeting people who sell and produce the burqas, there is less risk of a public outcry, like the one in France last summer after the government banned the burkini, a full-body swimsuit favoured by some Muslim women.

Le360, a news site close to the Moroccan interior ministry, quoted an unidentified ministry official who confirmed the ban on the sale of the garment, which is often blue and covers the head. The official did not confirm whether the ban would be extended to wearing the burqa.

The interior ministry did not return requests for comment. It also has not yet published an official statement on the specifics of the ban, and it is unclear what kind of religious full-body veils have been specifically targeted. Morocco’s official religious authorities have not taken a position on the issue.

Denouncement

Hammad Kabbadj, a conservative preacher and member of the Justice and Development Party who was not allowed to run in last autumn's legislative elections in which his party prevailed because he was deemed too "extremist", denounced the ban on his Facebook page.

He said he thought the ban was meant to create tensions that would ultimately hurt his party, which has been trying unsuccessfully to form a coalition government since October. “It is unacceptable,” he wrote. “It’s a perverted behaviour by the public authorities.”

The ban has spurred a fierce debate between Moroccans who see the move as repressing the religious freedom of women and those who applaud it as a liberation for women. "I am against the culture of banning in principle," Ali Anouzla, a Moroccan journalist, said on his Facebook page. "But just to be clear, the interior ministry didn't ban the hijab or niqab but banned the burqa, and the burqa isn't part of Morocco's culture."

Stephanie Willman Bordat, a founding partner at Mobilising for Rights Associates, a Morocco-based nongovernmental organisation, said many Moroccans saw the burqa as a neocolonial import from the Gulf states.

“Obviously the government’s interest is first and foremost security rather than women’s rights,” she said. “It’s unsurprising given the current security context and the concern the government has with maintaining security and stability and cracking down on the terrorists’ networks.”

New York Times