"Wearing
the burqa must stop immediately," Prime Minister Kalzeube
Pahimi Deubet announced to religious leaders
|
Chad's decision to ban women from wearing the Islamic veil,
which came two days after bloody suicide bombings hit the capital, has divided
Muslims but the government defends it as part of an anti-terror strategy.
"Wearing
the burqa must stop immediately from today," Prime Minister Kalzeube
Pahimi Deubet told religious leaders on Wednesday, after the twin bombings left
33 people dead and more than 100 others injured in the capital N'Djamena.
AFP report continues:
Nobody has claimed
responsibility for the attacks, but authorities blame Nigerian jihadist group
Boko Haram, which has carried out many suicide bombings inside Nigeria in the
past six years, sometimes by women who hid explosives under modest outer
garments.
Chad's army has
spearheaded a regional military effort to fight Boko Haram as the militant sect
extended activities beyond Nigeria's northeastern borders. After Monday's
blasts, the Chadian air force bombed Boko Haram positions inside Nigeria.
Many Muslim women in
N'Djamena wear the full-face veil with just the eyes exposed known as the
niqab, which is usually black. But Deubet outlawed any clothing "where you
can only see the eyes".
In a country where Muslims make up 53 percent of the
population -- with Christians accounting for 35 percent -- the ban on the
Islamic veil, including the completely face-covering burqa, has prompted mixed
reactions.
Abdelsadick Djidda, a
45-year-old teacher, said the move was "taken for our safety".
"Wearing the burqa
doesn't derive from Chadian culture," he said. "It comes from
elsewhere. And it's recommended nowhere in the holy book (the Koran)."
Djidda added: "As a
Muslim, I find that people go overboard a little with this camouflage."
- 'Seize all burqas on
sale' -
Other Muslims are shocked
by the decision, which comes as the holy fasting month of Ramadan gets under
way.
Hassan Barka, a mechanic, said he didn't see the connection
between the burqa and terrorism.
"It isn't people in
burqas who commit attacks and this dress has become customary for many
Chadians," said Barka, a mechanic. "It is difficult to implement this
decision. Maybe time is needed to spread awareness."
The tough prohibition is
a first in Africa. Some countries like Tunisia ordered similar measures before
now because of a growing risk of terrorist attacks, but they were partial and
temporary steps.
The Chadian regime has
ordered security forces to "go into the markets and seize all burqas on
sale and burn them", while warning of arrest and summary trial for anyone
caught dressed in the veil and robe.
"The Superior
Council of Islamic Affairs (CSAI) finds that the government's decision is not
contrary to the principles of Islam," influential CSAI chairman Cheick
Hussein Hassan Abakar has ruled.
In a poor nation that
bears deep scars after the bloody inter-faith clashes during a civil war in
1979-1982, President Idriss Deby Itno has long been wary of the emergence of
extremist movements.
In power since 1990, when
he toppled dictator Hissene Habre -- who is set to go on trial in Senegal for
crimes against humanity on July 20 -- Deby has repeatedly stressed that
"the secular nature of the state is an essential value".
- 'Very tolerant Islam' -
"We're lucky to have very tolerant Islam. The Muslims of
Chad are mainly Sufis, they are pacifists," said the secretary general of
King Faisal University in N'Djamena, Abakar Walar Modou.
"But Islam can be
manipulated. In (the civil war) politicians tried to plunge Christians and
Muslims into chaos," he recalled.
As Boko Haram has gained
ground towards N'Djamena, which lies on the border with a narrow strip of
Cameroon that separates it from Nigeria, the authorities have redoubled their
watch over the capital.
The regime seeks to prevent radical Islam from taking root in
Chad, where conservative Wahhabis and Salafis make up between five and 10
percent of Muslims, according to the US State Department.
"The Boko Haram
phenomenon has thus far had no impact on the population, but the risk is
there," warned Walar Modou.
"The CSAI keeps an extremely close watch over Koranic
teachings, preaching in the mosques and even the radio," he added.
Last March, authorities dissolved a Salafist association held
to be a risk to law and order. International watchdog Freedom House in 2013
reported bans on some Islamic charities operating in poor districts.
"Purely and simply banning an association is no
solution," Walar Modou said. "You can't halt an ideology that way, it
causes frustration."
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