French Prime Minister shows support for ban on so-called 'burkinis'

 Reuters

The French Prime Minister appears to have thrown his weight behind the ban on so-called 'burkinis' on the beach at Cannes.

The exclusive resort on the French Riviera took the step of banning the full body swim suits.

The ban comes a decade ofter full face veils were banned in France as a result of the country's strict secularist system which disallows much religious expression in the public square.

The Prime Minister, Manuel Valls, has now spoken out for the first time since the local ban on burkinis. The garments are, "not compatible with the values of the French Republic," he said, "in the face of provocation, the nation must defend itself."

France has been rocked by a series of terror attacks over the last 18 months and is in the midst of an urgent national debate over how to react.

The murder of a priest while saying Mass in Normandy last month has raised the temperature even further.

Several smaller towns have now followed Cannes in banning the burkini, and although no national ban is proposed at the moment, the Prime Minister's seeming endorsement of the policy is a step in that direction.

The debate of freedom of expression in the face of such bans will carry on – but there is no sign of an imminent repeal of the existing local legislation.

News
Sequel to hit Christian movie 'I Can Only Imagine' gets new release date
Sequel to hit Christian movie 'I Can Only Imagine' gets new release date

The release date for the faith-based film “I Can Only Imagine 2,” the sequel to the 2018 box office hit, is moving from March 20, 2026, to Feb. 20, 2026, Lionsgate and Kingdom Story Company have announced.

First Minister John Swinney among MSPs to oppose Assisted Dying Bill in crucial vote
First Minister John Swinney among MSPs to oppose Assisted Dying Bill in crucial vote

Scotland’s First Minister, John Swinney, has confirmed he will vote against the controversial Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill, ahead of its pivotal Stage 1 vote set for Tuesday evening. 

Suicide is a sin - why can't we say so?
Suicide is a sin - why can't we say so?

It might just be me, but amongst all the myriad and somewhat valid objections raised, including by Christians, to "Assisted Dying" (read "Doctors Killing Patients" or "Doctors Helping Patients to Kill Themselves"), I haven't really seen the most important, indeed the all-decisive, one.

Shabbat as 'strolling light'
Shabbat as 'strolling light'

Hebrew scholar and Jewish academic Irene Lancaster explains the Jewish perspective of the Sabbath.