Portugal Bans Burqa in Public Spaces

Portugal Bans Burqa in Public Spaces

Portugal ‘s parliament on Friday approved a bill banning face veils worn for “gender or religious” reasons in public.

The measure was proposed by the conservative Chega party and would prohibit coverings such as burqas — a full-body garment that covers a woman from head to foot — and niqabs — the full-face Islamic veil with space around the eyes — from being worn in most public places. Face veils would still be allowed in airplanes, diplomatic premises and places of worship.

The bill stipulates fines for those wearing face veils in public ranging between 200 euros and 4,000 euros ($234 and $4,669).

President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa still has to approve the bill. He could veto it or send it to the Constitutional Court for review.

If signed into law, Portugal would join a number of European countries such as Austria, France, Belgium and the Netherlands who have full or partial bans on face and head coverings.

Not many women in Portugal wear such coverings, but the issue of Islamic veils has generated controversy similar to other European countries.

Chega cited France and other European Union countries’ rationales for banning face coverings commonly worn by Muslim women. The Conservative Portuguese party received support for the bill from center-right parties.

In its bill, Chega said that hiding the face subjects individuals — especially women — “to situations of exclusion and inferiority” and was incompatible with principles such as “liberty, equality and human dignity.”

Lawmakers from left-leaning parties disagreed.

“This initiative is used solely to target foreigners, those who have a different faith,” said center-left Socialist Party lawmaker Pedro Delgado Alves whose party voted against the bill.

He said that while no woman should be forced to wear a veil, the conservative party’s approach was wrong.

Trump Commutes George Santos' Prison Sentence

Epstein Flight Manifests Released

Anti-Trump ‘No Kings’ Protests Planned Nationwide

Top Takeaways from Trump-Zelensky Meeting

Maine Senate Candidate Called Himself 'Communist'

Trump Asks Supreme Court to Allow National Guard in Chicago

Hackers Dox Hundreds of ICE Agents

Jack Smith Referred to DOJ for Misconduct Probe

Trump Meets Zelensky at White House

Bolton Pleads Not Guilty

Prince Andrew Surrenders Royal Titles

Stephen Miller Selling Home After Weeks of Harassment

Top Takeaways from NYC Mayoral Debate

Top Military Commander Steps Down

McConnell Falls at the Capitol

Trump Strikes Deal to Lower IVF Costs

KISS Founder Ace Frehley Dies at 74

PayPal Partner Mints $300T of Stablecoins in Error

John Bolton Indicted

Trump, Putin to Meet in Hungary