‘Sisters on Saturdays and
Sundays only’
April 27,
2016 2:29pm AFP and staff writersnews.com.au
In 2011,
France became the first country in Europe to ban the wearing of the veil in
public.
A MUSLIM
shopkeeper has been fined $730 (€500) for ordering different opening hours for
men and women at his store in the French city of Bordeaux, his lawyer said
Tuesday.
Jean-Baptiste
Michalon, the owner of a general store who converted to Islam in 2012, created
an uproar when he pasted a notice outside his store in June 2015 indicating
different shopping hours for men and women.
“Sisters”
were invited to shop on Saturdays and Sundays only, while “brothers” were told
they could shop on weekdays.
Michalon
quickly abandoned the plan faced with a swell of negative reaction, and his
shop has since closed its doors.
“We put
this in place at the request of the sisters who preferred when my wife was
behind the counter. It is a shop where we sell clothes,” Michalon told AFP at
the time.
Michalon’s
lawyer Tristram Heliot told AFP that the shop owner “admitted it was a blunder
and tactless”.
Politicians
slammed the move, as did Bordeaux’s chief Imam Tareq Oubrou. “We never saw this
during the time of the Prophet. Markets were mixed. It seems a bit strange to
me in a world where social mixing is an established culture,” he said.
Muslim
women in the audience at a Hizb ut-Tahrir conference in Sydney, titled ‘A
Community Criminalised: Innocent Until Proven Muslim?’
On
Twitter, Bordeaux Mayor Alain Juppé call for “an end to such a discriminatory
practice”, The Local reported,
while Naima Charai, the head of French equality group ACSE, tweeted that
gendered opening hours were “unimaginable and unacceptable”.
“Respect
for the republic should be seven days a week,” she wrote.
In
Australia, controversial Muslim group Hizb ut-Tahrir was recently ordered by a NSW tribunal to
stop segregating women at its events.
Former
News Corp journalist Alison Bevege sued the group and five of its members for
sexual discrimination after she was forced to sit in the women and children’s
section at a public lecture in 2014.
The NSW
Civil and Administrative Tribunal found Ms Bevege was treated unfavourably on
the grounds of her sex in contravention of section 33 of the NSW
Anti-Discrimination Act.
“People
should be judged for their character, intelligence, ideas and abilities — not
their skin colour or gender,” she wrote after the ruling.
“Islamists
argue that gender segregation is ‘separate but equal’, and voluntary — a free
religious choice. But secular Muslims exposed this idea as false.
“Lejla
Kuric, a former Bosnian refugee, is among those who have pointed out that women
are subject to social coercion if they step out of line in the West — and has
written about how in countries where gender segregation is enforced women are
severely held back in every aspect of life.” Originally published as Shop fined for ‘sexist’ hours.
This story has been brought to you by the Emerald Chamber of Commerce Inc.
(Ph: 07 4982 3444)
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