Top French court upholds burkini ban in Grenoble’s public pools
France’s top administrative court has ruled against allowing so-called burkini swimwear in Grenoble's public pools. While worn by only a small number of people in France, the burkini - a head-to-ankle swimsuit worn by some Muslim women - draws intense political debate in the country. Interior minister Gerald Darmanin hailed the ruling by the Council of State as a “victory for secularism.” However, some Muslim women decried it as unfairly targeting their faith and their bodies, and based on outdated misconceptions about Islam.
The city of Grenoble, led by a mayor from the Greens party, voted last month to allow women to wear burkinis in public pools after campaigning by local activists. The city also voted to allow women to swim topless, as part of a broader relaxation of swimwear rules. The prefect, or top government official, for the Grenoble region blocked the burkini decision, arguing it ran counter to France’s secular principles. The Council of State upheld the prefect's move Tuesday, saying in a statement that the Grenoble vote was made “to satisfy a religious demand” and “harms the neutrality of public services”. The ruling was the first under a controversial law, championed by President Emmanuel Macron, aimed at protecting “republican values” from what his government calls the threat of religious extremism. Clothing rules in public pools in France are strict, for what authorities say are reasons of hygiene: caps are required, and baggy swim trunks or other voluminous clothing is generally banned. Wetsuits are not allowed in many pools too, as are some sun-protection suits. A few other cities and towns allow burkinis in public pools. The city of Rennes is among them, but its decision was aimed at loosening swimwear rules and not based on religious reasons.
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The Grenoble mayor argued women should be able to wear what they want and express their religious conviction in pools like in the street. Opponents of the burkini – who include local officials from the far right but also the left - argued the swimwear represents the oppression of women and a potential gateway to Islamic radicalism. Six years ago, the Council of State struck down a local burkini ban, amid shock and anger after some Muslim women were ordered to remove body-concealing garments on French Riviera beaches. For Fatima Bent of Muslim feminist group Lallab, Tuesday’s ruling is “a clear step backwards” that will further isolate women who cover their heads and bodies in public. While some Muslim women are forced by male relatives to cover themselves, she said, “Muslim women are not homogenous. [French authorities] look at Muslim women through a single prism.”
She blamed a leftover colonial-era “fixation with the body of Muslim women by politicians who want to control them”. Grenoble’s decision about swimming topless has not been threatened in the courts.