Austria's ban on full-face veils comes into force

Austria's prohibition on full-face coverings – commonly called the "burka ban" – went into effect on Sunday. 

The government says the new law helps uphold Austrian values and promotes integration, despite the fact that such veils are rarely seen in public. Women are now banned from hiding their face in public – this includes wearing the burka, which veils the entire face and the niqab, which leaves the eyes free.

Those who are stopped by police and refuse to take off their veils face a penalty of 150 euros (176 dollars).

The new rule is part of the "integration package" of policies that conservative Foreign and Integration Minister Sebastian Kurz initiated amid his drive to win the October 15 parliamentary elections.

Kurz's People Party has for months led in voter surveys. The 31-year-old is therefore primed to become chancellor.

His election platform is strongly focused on curbing immigration and "growing Islamisation."

In 2011, France became the first European country to prohibit face veils in public.

Belgium, Bulgaria and Switzerland's Ticino region have followed suit, while the Netherlands has banned veils in public buildings.

In April this year, Germany's parliament opted for a limited ban, which applies only to public officials and soldiers on duty.

The European Court of Human Rights in July confirmed that such prohibitions are legal, backing the view that people need to see each other's faces to build normal relationships and to live in a democratic society.    (dpa)

Related articles on Qantara.de:

France's burka ban: Excluding the wrong people

Germany's headscarf ruling: What an imposition!

Germany and the semantics of exclusion: "We are not burka"