Protesters hold a sign which reads ” Islamophobia is not freedom” outside the French Embassy in London on August 25, 2016 during a “Wear what you want beach party” to demonstrate against the ban on Burkinis on French beaches and to show solidarity with Muslim women.
French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve warned Wednesday against stigmatising Muslims, as a furore over the banning of burkinis grew with the emergence of pictures showing police surrounding a veiled woman on a beach. Dozens of French towns and villages, mostly on the Cote d’Azur, have banned beachwear that “conspicuously” shows a person’s religion — a measure aimed at the full-body Islamic swimsuit but which has also been used against women wearing long clothes and a headscarf. / AFP PHOTO / JUSTIN TALLIS
Protesters pour out bags of sand to create a ‘beach’ outside the French Embassy in London on August 25, 2016, during a “Wear what you want beach party” to demonstrate against the ban on Burkinis on French beaches and to show solidarity with Muslim women.
French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve warned Wednesday against stigmatising Muslims, as a furore over the banning of burkinis grew with the emergence of pictures showing police surrounding a veiled woman on a beach. Dozens of French towns and villages, mostly on the Cote d’Azur, have banned beachwear that “conspicuously” shows a person’s religion — a measure aimed at the full-body Islamic swimsuit but which has also been used against women wearing long clothes and a headscarf. / AFP PHOTO / JUSTIN TALLIS
Protesters, some of whom are dressed in beachwear, gather outside the French Embassy in London on August 25, 2016 with sand on the pavement and placards during a “Wear what you want beach party” to demonstrate against the ban on Burkinis on French beaches and to show solidarity with Muslim women.
French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve warned Wednesday against stigmatising Muslims, as a furore over the banning of burkinis grew with the emergence of pictures showing police surrounding a veiled woman on a beach. Dozens of French towns and villages, mostly on the Cote d’Azur, have banned beachwear that “conspicuously” shows a person’s religion — a measure aimed at the full-body Islamic swimsuit but which has also been used against women wearing long clothes and a headscarf. / AFP PHOTO / JUSTIN TALLIS
Protesters, some of whom are dressed in beachwear, gather outside the French Embassy in London on August 25, 2016 with sand on the pavement and placards during a “Wear what you want beach party” to demonstrate against the ban on Burkinis on French beaches and to show solidarity with Muslim women.
French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve warned Wednesday against stigmatising Muslims, as a furore over the banning of burkinis grew with the emergence of pictures showing police surrounding a veiled woman on a beach. Dozens of French towns and villages, mostly on the Cote d’Azur, have banned beachwear that “conspicuously” shows a person’s religion — a measure aimed at the full-body Islamic swimsuit but which has also been used against women wearing long clothes and a headscarf. / AFP PHOTO / JUSTIN TALLIS
A woman wearing a “Burkini” joins a protest outside the French Embassy in London on August 25, 2016, during a “Wear what you want beach party” to demonstrate against the ban on Burkinis on French beaches and to show solidarity with Muslim women.
French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve warned Wednesday against stigmatising Muslims, as a furore over the banning of burkinis grew with the emergence of pictures showing police surrounding a veiled woman on a beach. Dozens of French towns and villages, mostly on the Cote d’Azur, have banned beachwear that “conspicuously” shows a person’s religion — a measure aimed at the full-body Islamic swimsuit but which has also been used against women wearing long clothes and a headscarf. / AFP PHOTO / JUSTIN TALLIS
Protesters, some of whom are dressed in beachwear, gather outside the French Embassy in London on August 25, 2016 with sand on the pavement and placards during a “Wear what you want beach party” to demonstrate against the ban on Burkinis on French beaches and to show solidarity with Muslim women. French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve warned Wednesday against stigmatising Muslims, as a furore over the banning of burkinis grew with the emergence of pictures showing police surrounding a veiled woman on a beach. Dozens of French towns and villages, mostly on the Cote d’Azur, have banned beachwear that “conspicuously” shows a person’s religion — a measure aimed at the full-body Islamic swimsuit but which has also been used against women wearing long clothes and a headscarf.