Man convicted of veil assault in France

Man convicted of veil assault in France
Updated 14 March 2013
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Man convicted of veil assault in France

Man convicted of veil assault in France

NANTES, France: A Frenchman who ripped a Muslim woman’s veil off her face as she strolled in a fairground was yesterday given a five-month suspended prison sentence and ordered to compensate his victim.
The 30-year-old man, who admitted charges of aggravated assault, had justified the September 2012 attack at the time as an attempt to uphold a controversial law banning women from wearing niqabs, face-covering veils, in public. That defense was thrown out by public prosecutors, who accused him of acting as a vigilante and carrying out an assault motivated by his victim’s religious faith.
The man, who was not publicly identified on the request of his lawyers, was also convicted of presenting a false identity to police. The incident in the western city of Nantes was the latest in a series triggered by France’s controversial ban on the wearing of full face veils in public, which came into force in April 2011. Last September, Louis-Marie Suisse, a Muslim teenager in Marseille, was sent to prison for two months after being convicted of biting a policewoman in an altercation sparked by her arrest for wearing a full-face veil. Under the law, women found guilty of wearing niqabs in public can be fined 150 euros ($ 190).