Senegal has banned women from wearing the burqa, amid rising fears of Islamic extremism in the west African country.
The interior minister, Abdoulaye Daouda, said
women would no longer be allowed to wear the Islamic dress, which
leaves only the eyes exposed. Daouda said the decision was a question of
national security and was designed to prevent terrorists from using the
burqa as a disguise.
An estimated 92% of Senegal’s population is Muslim. Although the
country has not suffered a terrorist attack recently, authorities are
concerned that the Islamic militant group Boko Haram,
based in north-eastern Nigeria, may be trying to extend its range. This
month, police arrested five people suspected of having ties to Boko
Haram as part of a nationwide crackdown.
Senegal is not alone in west Africa in banning the burqa. This year Cameroon and Chad,
also Muslim-majority countries, issued similar orders citing similar
reasons. “Senegal is just following the trend,” said Martin Ewi, a
senior researcher at the Institute for Security Studies.
He said the ban, though difficult to enforce, had been reasonably
effective in both countries. “You still have the villages and far
corners of the country where people don’t always respect the ban,” he
added.
However, the ban was not a foolproof solution, Ewi warned. Two days after Chad instituted a ban, two burqa-clad bombers
blew themselves up in N’Djamena, killing at least 27 people including
several police officers. “They deliberately wore the burqa to attract
the attention of the police,” Ewi said.
The burqa ban has been the subject of debate within Senegal, with
commentators struggling to balance the national security imperative with
religious freedom. “Its imposition in Senegal
will cause social instability … there is a delicate line between
preventive measures and respect for individual freedoms,” said Khadim
Mbacke, a Dakar-based researcher.
Mbaye Niang, a Muslim leader and member of parliament, said the new
law was designed to protect Islam. “We should not allow someone to cover
their entire body like terrorists do. This is a tradition of some
countries but it has nothing to do with Islam,”
he told the local newspaper Le Quotidien. The reason terrorists use
this method was because they wanted to attack the religion, he added.
Farid Essack, a religious studies scholar at the University of
Johannesburg, said that context was key and the justifications used in
Muslim countries did not necessarily apply elsewhere.
“In some political contexts, I find [the banning of burqas] deeply
disturbing and an extension of Islamaphobia. I don’t think that the
Chadian response is a manifestation of Islamophobia,” he said. “Chad …
has had several bombings, a number of them were seemingly perpetrated by
[fully covered] men, and I don’t think that it is unreasonable, in that
context, to insist people should not be completely veiled in public.”
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