French interior minister opposes ‘stigmatising’ hijab ban for minors

A girl arrives for the opening of the Muslim Al-Kindi college in Decines, near Lyon. (File/AFP)
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Updated 30 November 2025
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French interior minister opposes ‘stigmatising’ hijab ban for minors

  • issue of tightening legal limits on the wearing of the hijab in public is being raised with increasing insistence in France
  • Far-right is growing in strength in France but the country has one of Europe’s biggest Muslim communities

PARIS: France’s interior minister on Sunday said he opposed a proposal put before parliament to ban young girls wearing the Muslim headscarf, saying such a move risked being “stigmatising” for the minors.
The issue of tightening legal limits on the wearing of the hijab in public is being raised with increasing insistence in France, where the far-right is growing in strength but which has one of Europe’s biggest Muslim communities.
Laurent Wauquiez, the head of the parliamentary faction of the traditional right-wing Republicans (LR) party, submitted a bill to the lower house National Assembly last week to ban the wearing of the veil by minors in public.
This proposal “is very stigmatising toward our Muslim compatriots who may feel hurt,” Nunez, a former Paris police chief named as interior minister in October to succeed his hard-line LR predecessor Bruno Retailleau, told BFMTV. “I am not in favor of it in this way.”
A report by the LR in the upper house Senate has gone even further, suggesting banning Ramadan fasting for those under 16.
Nunez said that authorities needed to be “extremely careful” and focus on targeting fundamentalists with an extreme interpretation of the religion who seek to impose “religious law over the laws of the republic.”
But the issue is a subject of tension within President Emmanuel Macron’s center-right government, which is mindful that the far right has its best ever chance of winning the Elysee in the 2027 polls.
Equality Minister Aurore Berge told CNews she backed a hijab ban for minors “to protect children.”
“I have no doubt that there is now a majority in the National Assembly and the Senate to vote for it,” she said.
Macron’s center-right Renaissance party, led by former prime minister Gabriel Attal, in May also proposed banning “minors under 15 from wearing the veil in public spaces.”
Under current legislation in France, a secular state according to its constitution, civil servants, teachers and pupils cannot wear any obvious religious symbols such as a Christian cross, Jewish kippa, Sikh turban or Muslim hijab in government buildings, including public schools.


Germany’s Merz and Ukraine’s Zelensky praise truce efforts

Updated 30 January 2026
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Germany’s Merz and Ukraine’s Zelensky praise truce efforts

  • Donald Trump said Vladimir Putin had agreed to a week-long halt on attacks

BERLIN: German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and President Volodymyr Zelensky on Thursday welcomed “efforts in favor of a truce,” Berlin said, after Donald Trump said Vladimir Putin had agreed to a week-long halt on attacks on Ukraine’s power grid.
Merz at the same time stressed that “the systematic and brutal destruction of Ukraine’s civilian infrastructure by Russian attacks” was “still ongoing,” which he condemned “in the strongest terms,” his spokesman, Stefan Kornelius, said.