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  • Muslim says mistresses are the French way of life

    Muslim says mistresses are the French way of life

    By ELAINE GANLEY
    The Associated Press
    Monday, April 26, 2010

    PARIS -- A Muslim Frenchman at the center of a firestorm over polygamy said
    Monday that keeping mistresses is the French way of life.

    The man's case came to light after his wife was fined for driving with a
    veil covering her face, and his comments are an ironic riposte to those in
    French President Nicolas Sarkozy's government who want to push immigrants to
    better integrate into French society.

    The 31-year-old Frenchwoman drew nationwide attention last week to a driving
    fine she received for apparel that hinders her vision. But it soon emerged
    that her husband may have four wives - although it was doubtful the
    marriages were made official under French law.

    The situation appeared to be a boon to Sarkozy, who is trying to rush
    through controversial legislation forbidding burqa-style Islamic veils that
    cover the face, on the grounds that they don't respect French values or
    women's dignity. But it has stoked debate and may backfire on legal grounds.
    The president of the French parliament's lower chamber, Bernard Accoyer,
    said Monday the text of the bill to ban full Muslim veils would be presented
    at a Cabinet meeting May 19.

    Many Muslims fear a law banning face-covering veils because they say
    targeting the tiny minority of women who cover their faces stigmatizes
    France's entire Muslim community - at an estimated 5 million people, the
    largest in western Europe. The head of the main Muslim grouping, Mohamed
    Moussaoui, reiterated that message Monday after a meeting with Prime
    Minister Francois Fillon. He noted that shots fired over the weekend at a
    mosque in southern France failed to garner the attention given to the veil
    affair.

    Those who want a full ban on such veils contend the garment conceals more
    than the face, notably helping to perpetuate practices like polygamy,
    approved in some Muslim countries, and is a signpost of a radical
    interpretation of Islam.

    Interior Minister Brice Hortefeux wants to revoke the French citizenship of
    the driver's husband if he is found to be practicing polygamy. The man is
    also suspected of profiting from state subsidies for single women provided
    to each of the wives.

    Authorities are looking into whether the Algerian-born Lies Hebbadj was
    married to four women in French civil ceremonies, which would be highly
    unlikely. Were he married in religious ceremonies by imams in Algeria or in
    France, these unions would not count as marriages under French law, said
    Rabah Hached, a Paris lawyer who specializes in immigration issues. In that
    case, each of the officially unmarried women could potentially receive state
    aid for her children.

    For the attorney, the law may be on the side of the allegedly polygamous
    man.

    "It's not forbidden to have a mistress," Hached said by telephone. While
    stressing he does not know details of the case, Hached said that "I strongly
    suspect this gentleman we're talking about is within his rights."

    Hebbadj, defended his lifestyle Monday by turning the notion of polygamy on
    its head.

    "If we are stripped of nationality, for having mistresses," Lies Hebbadj
    told reporters in Nantes, then "there would be a lot of French people
    stripped of nationality. As far as I know, mistresses are not forbidden,
    neither in France, nor in Islam."

    He did not specify whether he lives under the same roof with the various
    women in his life, although press reports have quoted neighbors as saying he
    moves between several houses. Hebbadj, whose robed image has been flashed
    around France by TV, runs a recently opened halal butcher shop.
    The revelation last week that a police officer cited the woman, whose name
    has not been revealed, for driving while wearing a niqab, which reveals only
    the eyes, provided a taste of what is in store.

    A French bill that would outlaw the veils in all public places will be
    introduced in May, despite a ruling by France's highest administrative body
    that it risks being found unconstitutional.

    Prime Minister Francois Fillon met Monday with Muslim leaders and the
    justice minister Monday to lay the groundwork for an eventual law.
    Belgium also plans a full ban on Islamic garments that cover the face and
    was expected to be the first EU country to institute one, until the collapse
    last week of the Belgian government. That legislation is on hold.

    Sarkozy, who has striven to revive what he says is a loss of basic French
    values, is sinking in polls and his conservative party was trounced in March
    regional elections. Some Socialist rivals suggested the arrest of the veiled
    driver with a suspect husband was a setup.

    A Socialist Party spokesman accused Sarkozy of playing to the
    anti-immigration far-right.

    "The government decided ... to continue its strategy of stigmatizing"
    Muslims and has become "the best ally of Islamic extremists in France,"
    Benoit Hamon said Monday. "A banal police citation has been transformed into
    an affair of state."

    France's Muslim leaders have consistently said the veil debate is
    stigmatizing Muslims.

    The question of banning face-covering veils was first broached last June
    when Sarkozy told parliament that such garments are "not welcome" in France,
    a message he repeated last month.

    The issue blossomed into a major debate, recalling the enmity dividing
    politicians and citizens before France outlawed Muslim headscarves and other
    "ostentatious" religious symbols from classrooms in 2004.

    The Interior Ministry estimates no more than 1,900 Muslim women wear attire
    that hides the face.

    There are no official numbers on the number of polygamous families in
    France, most of which are from sub-Saharan Africa, but they are estimated in
    the tens of thousands.


    © 2010 The Associated Press
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