Swiss region votes by two-thirds majority to ban burkas

Canton of St Gallen votes to suppress full-face coverings, which also includes the niqab

Two-thirds of Switzerland’s 8.5m residents identify as Christians. But its Muslim population has risen to 5% largely due to  immigrants from former Yugoslavia. File photograph: Getty Images
Two-thirds of Switzerland’s 8.5m residents identify as Christians. But its Muslim population has risen to 5% largely due to immigrants from former Yugoslavia. File photograph: Getty Images

Voters in St Gallen, Switzerland, on Sunday approved by a two-thirds majority a ban on facial coverings such as the burka, becoming the second Swiss canton to do so.

Full-face coverings such as niqabs and burkas are a polarising issue across Europe, with some arguing that they symbolise discrimination against women and should be outlawed. The clothing has already been banned in France and Denmark.

Under the Swiss system of direct democracy, voters in the northeastern canton demanded tightening the law to punish those who cover their faces in public and thus “threaten or endanger public security or religious or social peace”.

The regional government, which had opposed the measure, now has to implement the result of the vote, which drew turnout of about 36 per cent.

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Switzerland’s largest Islamic organisation, the Islamic Central Council, recommended women continue to cover their faces. It said it would closely monitor the implementation of the ban and consider legal action if necessary.

Facial coverings

The Swiss federal government in June opposed a grassroots campaign for a nationwide ban on facial coverings.

The Swiss cabinet said individual cantons should decide on the matter, but it will nevertheless go to a nationwide vote after activists last year collected more than the required 100,000 signatures to trigger a referendum.

Two-thirds of Switzerland’s 8.5 million residents identify as Christians. But its Muslim population has risen to 5 per cent, largely because of immigrants from former Yugoslavia.

One Swiss canton, Italian-speaking Ticino, already has a similar ban, while two others have rejected it. – Reuters