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Summary: ARTICLE 19 has made a third-party submission in the case of S.A.S. v France will be the first in which the European Court of Human Rights will address the compatibility of a criminal ban on wearing the full-face veil in any public place with the European Convention on Human Rights.
[22 July 2013] - ARTICLE 19 has filed third-party intervention submissions in the case of S.A.S. v. France (no. 31955/11). The case is currently pending before the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights (European Court). ARTICLE 19 argues that France’s 2010 criminal ban on full-face veils in public violates: The applicant to the European Court, a French national and practising Muslim, complained that she was fined for wearing the niqab (a full body covering with a veil that covers a woman’s hair and face leaving on the eyes visible). A ban on wearing clothing concealing one’s face in public came into effect in France in April 2011. The penalty for breaking the law is a fine of up to €150 or compulsory citizenship classes. Separate penalties are provided for anyone forcing a woman to conceal her face in public. The applicant is one of 300 women who were fined under the law within its first year. The case was passed to the Grand Chamber of the European Court on 28 May 2013. The case of S.A.S. v France will be the first in which the European Court will address the compatibility of a criminal ban on wearing the full-face veil in any public place with the European Convention on Human Rights. ARTICLE 19 believes that this case presents the European Court with an important opportunity to clearly set out the appropriate scope of laws which restrict religious attire, whether on the basis of: In our submissions, we outline comparative international and state practice in this area, addressing the following issues: The submissions point to the existence of a growing body of law at national level to support the position that general bans on the full-face veil are incompatible with international human rights protections. Numerous national courts have limited existing bans in recent years, including laws that are much more limited than the one at issue in S.A.S. v. France. At the same time, legislatures in many countries have resisted populist calls to restrict the wearing of full-face veils, doing this on the basis of their domestic and international commitments to human rights protection. ARTICLE 19 therefore submits that general prohibitions on the full-face veil are not supported by international standards on the right to freedom of expression, freedom of religion or belief and the prohibition on discrimination. Read ARTICLE 19’s submission to the European Court in full. Further Information:
The case of S.A.S v. France
ARTICLE 19’s submissions
pdf: http://www.article19.org/resources.php/resource/37171/en/european-court-...