A French Muslim
called Myriam says on Friday that the suspension of the burkini ban
won’t change the ‘atmosphere of fear’ in France. Marwan
Muhammad, spokesman for the Collective Against Islamophobia in
France, praises the decision by France’s top administrative court
to overturn the ban. Beachgoers in Corsica have mixed feelings.
VIDEO / Below
VIDEO / Below
Dutch
party wants to outlaw mosques, Islamic schools, Koran
Freedom
Party says it wants to reverse the ‘Islamization’ of the
Netherlands.
By HORTENSE GOULARD
AND CYNTHIA KROET 8/26/16, 11:30 AM CET Updated 8/26/16, 2:50 PM CET
The Dutch far-right
Freedom Party will run in the country’s parliamentary elections
next year on a platform seeking to ban some of the key tenets of
Islam, according to a manifesto published by its leader Geert Wilders
Thursday.
In its five-year
plan for 2017-2021, the Freedom Party pledges to reverse the
“Islamization” of the Netherlands by implementing measures such
as closing mosques and Islamic schools, securing borders, banning the
Koran, closing asylum seeker centers, banning Muslim migrants and
forbidding women from wearing headscarves.
Wilders’ party
also supports holding a Brexit-style referendum for the Netherlands
to leave the European Union.
Other promises
include more funding for police and defense and eliminating foreign
aid.
The plan, which is
just one page, comes ahead of the next parliamentary elections,
scheduled for March 2017.
So far three parties
have presented their election manifesto.
Wilders intended to
keep the document, including budgetary proposals, short in order to
make it fit on one page, Dutch paper De Volkskrant reported. However,
Green party leader Jesse Klaver mocked the short plan, tweeting a
satirical video suggesting Wilders should get rid of all “leftist
hobbies” — a reference to how right-wing politicians refer to
government spending on development aid and culture.
Dutch Ministers and
Secretaries of State observe, on behalf of the Cabinet, a minute of
silence in tribute to the victims of the Paris attacks claimed by
Islamic State at the French Embassy in The Hague on November 16, 2015
An IPSOS poll
predicted this month that the Freedom Party could be the most
represented party in the Dutch parliament, snatching 25 to 30 seats,
up from the 12 it currently has. While popular with voters, the party
is likely to remain on the periphery because it will struggle to
secure coalition partners.
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