Tuesday, 19 August 2014

Photos: Drunk Belgian diplomat is arrested for yanking veil off a Qatari princess

A senior Belgium diplomat specialising in protocol has been arrested for tearing off the full-face veil of a Qatari princess after she asked him for directions.
In the latest example of the difficulties involved in imposing a so-called ‘burka ban’, Jean-Marie Pire did not know the identity of the massively wealthy VIP before attacking her.
She approached him with two other women in broad daylight in central Brussels last week, asking for directions to the famous Grand Place.
The kind of full face veils favoured by some Muslim women are banned in Belgium, just as they are in neighbouring countries including France.
‘I said I don’t talk to anyone if I can’t see their face,’ said Mr Pire. ‘With this reply, I wanted to make it clear that the veil is banned in Belgium.
‘Because the person asking me a question didn’t seem to hear me, I lifted her veil. I know I shouldn’t have done that, but what she did wasn’t legal either!’
The woman, who has not been named, said she suffered cuts and bruises after her earrings were violently dislodged, along with her veil.
Jean-Marie Pire, Chief of Protocol for the city of Brussels, allegedly left a woman with cuts and bruises after pulling the full-face veil, which is illegal in Belgium, from her face
Senior Belgium diplomat, Jean-Marie Pire

She has made an official complaint to Brussels prosecutors, who may now charge Mr Pire with assault.
The woman herself faces a fine of around £115 and up to seven days in prison for wearing the veil in public.
Some onlookers have claimed that Mr Pire was drunk at the time of the incident, although he denies this, saying it was ‘three o’clock in the afternoon’, adding: ‘Besides, I don’t drink much.’
As the Chief of Protocol for the city of Brussels, one of Mr Pire’s main jobs is to welcome foreign dignitaries, including many from the Middle East.
France, which is home to some five million Muslims, was the first European country to ban the full-face Islamic veil in public places in 2011.
Belgium followed suit soon afterwards, and in December 2012 Belgium's Constitutional Court rejected appeals for the ban to be annulled, ruling that it did not violate human rights.
There is no veil ban in Britain, but Conservative MP Philip Hollobone is among politicians who have called for one.
‘We will never have a fully functioning, fully integrated multi-cultural society if growing numbers of our citizens go around with their faces covered,’ Mr Hollobone said.
Stock image: A woman wears a full-face veil like the one Jean-Marie Pire ripped from the Qatari princess' face
File photo






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