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Right before the ban came into effect, she said she would continue to go "shopping, to the post office and to city hall if necessary. I will under no circumstance stop wearing my veil." "If I am warned verbally and must appear before the local prosecutor.... I will appeal to the European Court of Human Rights," she told AP Television News. The veil, for her, "is a submission to God," Drider said. The ban had strong support from France's leading parties on left and right in a country that separated church and state with a 1905 law but has struggled in recent years to integrate a growing Muslim population. Police on Saturday arrested 61 people -- including 19 women -- for attempting to hold an outlawed Paris protest against France's pending ban on face-covering Islamic veils. Many Muslims have also felt stigmatized by a 2004 law that banned Islamic headscarves in classrooms.
[Associated
Press;
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