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| Photo: Depositphotos.com |
Dutch senators on Tuesday voted in favour of
bringing in a ban on wearing a burqa or other face-covering clothing on public
transport, in government buildings and in schools and hospitals.
The vote in
favour comes 13 years after a burqa ban was first mooted. The ban includes a
€400 fine for people who cover their faces in government buildings.
Senators
expressed concern that the new law is purely symbolic and will have a severe
impact on the few hundred women who wear a burqa or nikab in the Netherlands.
Nevertheless, a clear majority voted in favour of the ban.
Home affairs
minister Kajsa Ollongren will now discuss with the police and other officials
when the bill should come into effect.
Ollongren’s party D66 was the only one
of the four government coalition parties to vote against the ban. The
SP, PvdA and GroenLinks also voted against.
Dutch senators overwhelmingly approved a bill Tuesday to ban the Islamic full-face burqa from some public places such as schools and hospitals, ending years of discussion on a hot-button issue https://t.co/Rgs0SfYRv3— AFP news agency (@AFP) June 26, 2018

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