SHOTLIST
29
April, 2010
1. Wide interior shot of
Belgian parliament
2.
Close of court screen which reads (
Dutch/
French) "The proposal for the banning of clothing that totally hides the face"
3.
Female politician voting electronically
4.
Pull out from electronic scorecard showing 136 votes in favour of "burqa ban", none opposed, 2 abstentions to wide of parliament applauding
5. Close of electronic screen showing red for abstentions, green for "yes" votes
6.
Belgian flag outside parliament
7. Wide exterior of
Parliament building, with
Belgian and EU flags
8. SOUNDBITE: (French)
Jacques Otlet,
Mouvement Reformateur,
Member of
Belgian Parliament:
"It is a question of respect. We want to respect the women, to confirm the legality of man/woman in our country. And there is also evidently a security aspect which intervenes, because if all the inhabitants of
Belgium for one reason or another decide to hide the face, how can everyone communicate together, because the face allows us to recognise each other. These are the fundamental reasons for the vote today."
9.
Statues inside
Parliament lobby
10. Politician making speech on burqa issue earlier in day
11.
Various of woman wearing a headscarf in public viewing gallery
12. Wide of Parliament debate
22 April, 2010
13. Various shots of woman wearing a burqa-type
Islamic dress, walking around park
9 April,
2010
14. Various shots of women wearing headscarves, which are not being banned
STORYLINE
Belgium's lower house of parliament on Thursday banned burqa-type Islamic dress in public but the measure faces a sudden hurdle in the
Senate, putting an early enactment of the law in doubt.
Christian Democrats and
Liberals in the Senate questioned on Thursday the phrasing of the law that holds no one can appear in public "with the face fully or partly covered so as to render them no longer recognisable."
Following the April 22 fall of
Premier Yves Leterme's government of Christian Democrats, Liberals and Socialists, Belgium faces early elections.
That may delay passage of the anti-burqa law by many months.
The measure was approved unopposed by the lower house's interior affairs committee March 31 and the lower house itself.
"If all the inhabitants of Belgium for one reason or another decide to hide the face, how can everyone communicate together, because the face allows us to recognise each other. These are the fundamental reasons for the vote today," said Jacques Otlet, a
Belgian MP.
The initiative when passed is expected to become law in July and would apply to all public places, including streets.
Anxieties that visible signs of
Islam erode national identity are merging with complaints that immigrants are stealing jobs amid the worst economic slump in decades, to deepen a sense of unease in many
European countries, small and large alike, over the role of Muslims in society.
Threats against cartoonists and artists over depictions of the prophet
Muhammad have also raised fears that Islam is not compatible with
Western values of freedom of speech.
Swiss voters recently voted to ban the construction of new minarets.
In recent years, both mosque and minaret construction projects in many European countries, including
Sweden,
France,
Italy,
Austria,
Greece,
Germany and
Slovenia have generated protests, some of them violent.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy favours a ban on burqa-style Islamic veils on the grounds that they don't respect French values or women's dignity.
Unlike the
Belgians or the Dutch - who see a clear and straightforward public security issue - the French are struggling with the constitutionality of outlawing a religious dress code.
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- published: 24 Jul 2015
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