French official links Muslim women’s veil-wearing to slavery

An online petition claiming over 18,000 signers accused France's minister for women's rights of racism for the remarks.

French minister for women's rights Laurence Rossignol compared Muslim women wearing the veil to black people accepting slavery. REUTERS/Charles Platiau
French minister for women's rights Laurence Rossignol compared Muslim women wearing the veil to black people accepting slavery. REUTERS/Charles Platiau

French minister for women’s rights Laurence Rossignol compared Muslim women wearing the veil to black people accepting slavery. REUTERS/Charles Platiau

PARIS (Reuters) – France’s minister for women’s rights came under fire on Thursday (March 31) for saying Muslim women who wear veils were like black slaves in favor of slavery.

An online petition claiming over 18,000 people had signed it accused her of racism, and her words were denounced by an anti-Islamophobia campaigner.


“Of course there are women who choose (to wear the veil). There were African negroes, American negroes who were for slavery. I believe that these women, a lot of them, are militants for political Islam, and I confront them as militants, … for the project for society that they represent,” the minister, Laurence Rossignol, said in an interview on BFM TV on Wednesday.

She was later reported to have apologized for the use of the word negro, but stood by her comparison of veil wearing to slavery.

“I strongly denounce these suggestions which stigmatize Muslim women,” Abdallah Zekri, president of the National Observatory on Islamophobia was quoted as saying by Le Monde newspaper.

Rossignol is a strong proponent of a French political tradition that seeks to keep religion separate from political and educational life.

The approach has created tensions in France about the wearing of religious symbols in schools and other public places. France has a Catholic heritage and is also home to the biggest Muslim and Jewish populations in Europe.

Last year’s Islamist militant attacks in Paris have heightened concerns about the way Muslims in France are perceived by the rest of the population.


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