Sonia Yaker V France
Sonia Yaker V France
Sonia Yaker V France
1.1 The author of the communication is Sonia Yaker, a French national born in 1974 and
domiciled in Saint-Denis, France. She claims to be a victim of a violation by France of her
rights under articles 18 and 26 of the Covenant. 1 She is represented by counsel, Roger
Kallas.
GE.18-21160(E)
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1.2 The first Optional Protocol to the Covenant entered into force for France on 17 May
1984. France has entered a reservation. 2
1.3 On 5 September 2016, the Special Rapporteur on new communications and interim
measures informed the State party and the author of his decision to consider the
admissibility of the communication separately from the merits, pursuant to rule 97,
paragraph 3, of the Committee’s rules of procedure.
2 Upon ratification, France issued the following reservation: “France makes a reservation to article 5,
paragraph 2 (a), specifying that the Human Rights Committee shall not have competence to consider a
communication from an individual if the same matter is being examined or has already been
considered under another procedure of international investigation or settlement.”
3 Community court judges have jurisdiction to hear civil cases involving disputes of up to 4,000 euros.
For criminal cases, community courts can hear cases involving minor offences of the first four
categories. Article 15 of the Act modernizing the justice system of the twenty-first century called for
the community courts to be eliminated by 1 July 2017. On that date, for civil cases, ongoing
proceedings that were before the community courts were transferred to a court of minor jurisdiction
(tribunal d’instance).
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2.6 The application was rejected by the criminal chamber of the Court of Cassation in a
decision of 3 April 2013, on the grounds that “the invocation of a violation of the European
Convention on Human Rights, since it was not brought before the trial judge and includes
additional factual evidence, is new and thus inadmissible”. The decision is final. The author
claims that she has exhausted all domestic remedies.
2.7 The author points out that she was not assisted by counsel at the community court in
Nantes, that the procedure is an extremely expedited one, with a single judge who is
generally not even a judge by profession and that the procedure is not subject to an appeal
during which she would have been able to put forth arguments related to her religious
freedom and the discriminatory nature of the law.
2.8 The author adds that the Court of Cassation, by holding that “the invocation of a
violation of the European Convention on Human Rights, as it was not brought before the
trial judge and includes additional factual evidence, is new and as such is inadmissible”,
incorrectly applied article 619 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides that: “New
grounds will not be admissible before the Court of Cassation. Nevertheless, the following
may be raised for the first time, unless otherwise provided: (1) purely legal grounds; and (2)
grounds based on the impugned decision.”
2.9 According to the author, as the ground invoked, that is, the incompatibility of a law,
constitutes “purely legal grounds”, the challenge against the prohibition of the full-face veil
brought before the Court of Cassation was completely admissible, notwithstanding the fact
that the argument introduced a new element. The author cites the example of a posteriori
monitoring of constitutionality; since 2010, initial monitoring has been possible by means
of an application for judicial review in cassation. She adds that an objective assessment of
whether a law is constitutional is by nature an abstract “purely legal ground”, without any
consideration of the circumstances of a given case. According to the author, the same holds
when the conformity of a domestic law is assessed, with just as much objectivity, against a
treaty obligation.
2.10 The author thus invites the Committee to find that inadmissibility cannot be cited
against her in this case, as the grounds invoked before the Court of Cassation did not
constitute additional evidence of fact and law, but “purely legal grounds”.
2.11 The author submitted an application to the European Court of Human Rights on 24
June 2013, calling for it to find violations of articles 6 (1) and 9 of the European
Convention on Human Rights. The application was declared inadmissible by the Court,
which met between 21 August 2014 and 4 September 2014, with a single judge, on the
grounds that “the conditions of admissibility laid down in articles 34 and 35 of the
Convention [had] not been met”.
The complaint
3.1 According to the author, the prohibition against concealing the face in public areas
and the fact that she was convicted for wearing the niqab violate her rights under articles 18
and 26 of the Covenant.
3.2 Regarding article 18, wearing the niqab or the burqa amounts to wearing a garment
that is customary for a segment of the Muslim faithful. It is an act motivated by religious
beliefs. Consequently, it is the performance of a rite or practice of a religion, and freedom
to manifest that religion is guaranteed by article 18 of the Covenant, notwithstanding the
fact that wearing the niqab or the burqa is not a religious requirement common to all
practising Muslims. The author refers to the Committee’s general comment No. 22 (1993)
on the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion, according to which the
observance and practice of religion or belief may include not only ceremonial acts, but also
such customs as the observance of dietary regulations, and the wearing of distinctive
clothing or head coverings. Wearing the niqab or the burqa amounts to wearing a garment
that is customary for a segment of the Muslim faithful, an act motivated by religious belief
that is indeed the performance of a rite and practice of a religion, and freedom to manifest a
religion is guaranteed by article 18 of the Covenant.
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3.3 According to the author, there can be no disputing that the State is interfering in the
religious freedom of the minority of Muslim women who wear the full-face veil (according
to a parliamentary commission that studied the matter, fewer than 2,000 women are
reportedly concerned). The author recalls, in this regard, the reservation entered by the
French Constitutional Council regarding places of worship in its decision of 7 October
2010: 4 “The prohibition against concealing the face in public areas cannot, without
excessively undermining article 10 of the Declaration of 1789, restrict the exercise of
religious freedom in places of worship open to the public.” According to the author, it must
be admitted as a counterpoint that the exercise of religious freedom in the rest of public
areas has indeed been restricted by the legislature.
3.4 The author refers to the jurisprudence of the Committee, in particular the R. Singh v.
France ruling,5 in which the Committee found a violation of article 18 in a case of one-time
interference, when a person was photographed bareheaded for the renewal of a residence
permit. According to the author, the prohibition against wearing a full-face veil in public
areas is all the more so a type of interference in her freedom of religion, as she is at all
times being forced to appear without her full-face veil.
3.5 The author adds that the limitations to article 18 have not been justified on
permissible grounds, such as those mentioned in article 18 (3) of the Covenant. While
limitations are provided by the law, they are neither necessary nor proportionate to the
objective. First of all, the objective has not been clearly defined by the legislature. Act No.
2010-1192 contains no statement of purpose and provides no information on its legal basis;
it does not even refer to a parliamentary resolution of 11 May 2010 in which the National
Assembly expressed the view that wearing a full-face veil went against the principles of the
French Republic. 6 A quick look at the origins of the Act shows that it was justified
exclusively by a political desire to ban, as a matter of principle, the wearing of the full-face
veil;7 the law thus had no legitimate objective in the sense intended under article 18 (3) of
the Covenant. The lack of a legitimate objective undermines the argument that the law was
even necessary.
3.6 Even if such an objective were established, such a limitation could not possibly be
considered as necessary and proportionate. The State has put forward the argument 8 that
Act No. 2010-1192 pursued two main objectives: equality between men and women and the
protection of public order. Such objectives, however, cannot justify an infringement of the
right to manifest one’s religion.
3.7 First, the objective of equality between men and women cannot per se be associated
with any of the purposes set out in article 18 (3). The Committee has stated, in its general
comment No. 22 (para. 8), that restrictions were not allowed on grounds not specified in
paragraph 3. The author adds that forcing women who wish to wear full-face veils in public
to remove them constitutes the imposition of a dress code on women, and that presumptions
relating to their attitudes towards gender inequality are based solely on prejudices held by
some people about the way of life of certain groups. No woman wearing a full-face veil has
ever advocated inequality between men and women.
3.8 As for the protection of public order, which is the only basis that could have been
retained if the legislature had chosen, in accordance with the opinion of some members of
4 The parliament brought the case before the Constitutional Council on 14 September 2010, in
accordance with the conditions set by article 61 (2) of the Act prohibiting the concealment of the face
in public areas. In its decision of 7 October 2010, the Council declared the Act to be in conformity
with the Constitution, while making a reservation in respect of places of worship open to the public.
5 R. Singh v. France (CCPR/C/102/D/1876/2009), para. 8.4. The author also refers to the cases of B.
Singh v. France (CCPR/C/106/D/1852/2008), para. 8.7; and S.M. Singh v. France
(CCPR/C/108/D/1928/2010), para. 9.5.
6 National Assembly resolution of 11 May 2010 on the commitment to uphold republican values in the
face of the development of radical practices that undermine them.
7 The author notes that, on 22 June 2009, before a joint session of the French parliament held at
Versailles, Nicolas Sarkozy, then President of the Republic, stated that “the burqa is not welcome in
the French Republic”.
8 The author refers to the fifth periodic report of France to the Committee (CCPR/C/FRA/5), paras. 429 ff.
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parliament, to limit the prohibition against wearing a full-face veil to certain places or
occasions, or to establish an obligation to temporarily uncover the face for the purpose of
identification. That, however, was not what the Government of France opted to do.
3.9 The author notes that it has never been claimed that women wearing the burqa or the
niqab, who incidentally are a tiny minority, threaten public safety or create public unrest.
While it can be legitimately argued that, in certain specific circumstances, it must be
possible to identify persons in public places with their faces uncovered, it is unimaginable
that such an obligation to “unveil” could be permanent and absolute. Only specific
restrictions could be tolerated. Because it is general in nature, the prohibition established by
Act No. 2010-1192 cannot be described as necessary for the protection of public order.
3.10 In any event, the prohibition is not proportionate to its objective, as the prohibition is
permanent, it covers all public spaces and its violation is a criminal offence. The author
further notes that the wearing of the full-face veil, the means of concealment of the face
specifically referred to by the draft and in the debate that preceded the adoption of the Act,
apparently cannot ever be authorized under the exceptions set out in article 2 (II). 9
3.11 The European Court of Human Rights, in its judgment in the case of S.A.S. v.
France, dismissed the objective of protecting public order and safety invoked by France,
applying the principle of proportionality. 10 The author concludes, therefore, that the
prohibition against concealing the face in public is not necessary to protect public order and
safety, insofar as the prohibition is clearly disproportionate to the stated objective.
3.12 With regard to the claim under article 26, the author submits that the application of
Act No. 2010-1192 was indirectly discriminatory, as it effectively compromised her
exercise of freedom of religion and freedom of movement. The Act does not treat the
author in the same way as it treats the rest of the population. It obliges her, if she does not
wish to risk a criminal penalty, to refrain from wearing the full-face veil in public, while for
her, doing so is a religious duty. As the only way for her to wear the veil is to avoid going
out and moving about in public, her liberty of movement, specifically guaranteed by article
12 of the Covenant, is restricted.
3.13 While Act No. 2010-1192 is supposed to apply without distinction to any person
who conceals their face in public, the fact remains that it has the effect of indirectly
discriminating against women who wear the full-face veil. The discussions preceding the
adoption of the Act clearly attest to the fact that it was considered a general solution in the
law, designed to prohibit specifically the full-face veil. This indirect discrimination is also
confirmed by the figures relating to the implementation of the Act, which nonetheless is
supposed to cover any type of facial concealment, including helmets or ski masks. 11
3.14 Lastly, the author reiterates that there are 2,000 women who wear the full-face veil
in France. They account for more than half of the persons subjected to checks under the Act,
which demonstrates that they are disproportionately subjected to checks.
3.15 The author therefore calls for a finding that articles 18 and 26 of the Covenant have
been violated.
9 Article 2 (II) stipulates that the prohibition does not apply “if such clothing is prescribed or authorized
by legislative or regulatory provisions …, is justified for health reasons or on professional grounds, or
is part of sporting, artistic or traditional festivities or events”. The circular of 2 March 2011
subsequently clarified, to a certain extent, the implementation of the Act. With regard to the legal
exceptions, it stipulates that “religious processions, to the extent that they are of a traditional nature,
are covered by the scope of the exceptions to the article 1 prohibition”. However, the word “religious
procession” is not defined.
10 S.A.S. v. France [GC] (application No. 43835/11), judgment of 1 July 2014, para. 139.
11 It is noted in the 2013 report of the Observatory of Secularism, a body under the office of the French
Prime Minister, that “from the beginning of implementation of the Act up until 21 February 2014,
1,111 checks were carried out, the vast majority being performed on women wearing full face veils.
Some were checked on several occasions. In all, 1,038 police reports were issued recording the
offence and 61 offenders received warnings. Among the 594 women who were fully veiled and
subjected to checks, 461 had been born in France and 133 abroad. The foreigners came mainly from
the Maghreb (97) and the Middle East (9). Nine were from the sub-Saharan African community.”
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12 The State party refers to the case of B. Singh v. France, para. 7.4.
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4.9 In the second situation, if the European Court of Human Rights has rejected an
application that it considers manifestly ill-founded, then it must have carried out an
examination of the claims put forward by the applicants, which means that it has reviewed
the merits of the case. That too would leave the Committee without jurisdiction, because of
the reservation filed by France.
4.10 The argument that the case in question is not the same case cannot be accepted. The
application relates to the same facts and the same circumstances as that submitted to the
European Court of Human Rights. What is more, the issues raised are the same. In
conclusion, the Committee should declare the communication inadmissible.
13 See also the Committee’s Views in A.G.S. v. Spain (CCPR/C/115/D/2626/2015), para. 4.2.
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were based on “purely legal” grounds in the sense of article 619 of the Code of Civil
Procedure.
6.4 The Committee observed that the State party had not rebutted these allegations, and
specifically those concerning the proceedings before the community court and their
availability and effectiveness in the author’s case. The Committee further noted that the
community court was a public place where, under the Act, it would be a criminal offence to
wear a niqab, and that the State party had indicated in its submission that when the author
had tried to attend the hearing before the community judge she had been fined a second
time for refusing to remove her full-face veil during the security check, and that ultimately
she had not attended the hearing. The Committee also noted that the B. Singh v. France
case invoked by the State party did not involve a criminal procedure in which the right of
appeal had to be guaranteed, and that the author in that case had had the opportunity to raise
his complaints with two lower courts before trying to raise new ones before the Court of
Cassation. By contrast, in the present case the Committee considered that the author had
been unable to have her complaints reconsidered on appeal before a court other than the
Court of Cassation14 and concluded that reasonably available domestic remedies had been
exhausted.
6.5 The Committee declared that the communication was admissible, insofar as it raised
issues with respect to articles 18 and 26 of the Covenant.
14 In paragraph 48 of its general comment No. 32 (2007) on the right to equality before courts and
tribunals and to a fair trial, the Committee sets out that the State party has a duty to review
substantively, both on the basis of sufficiency of the evidence and of the law, the conviction and
sentence, such that the procedure allows for due consideration of the nature of the case.
15 National Assembly resolution on the commitment to uphold republican values in the face of the
development of radical practices that undermine them.
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religious reasons, the prohibition may be seen as a “restriction” on the freedom to manifest
one’s religion or belief (external forum).
7.6 The State party submits that, in this case, the restriction in question is prescribed
by law, has a legitimate objective and is proportionate in the pursuit of that legitimate
objective. The ban and the exceptions thereto are laid down in clear and precise terms. The
State party adds that a circular of 2 March 2011 provides a comprehensive explanation of
the scope and the implementing arrangements of the Act, accompanied by an information
campaign in public places, the distribution of leaflets in administrative premises and an
educational website. The State party further stresses that the Act provided for a period of
six months between its enactment and its entry into force; therefore it met the requirement
of foreseeability and the author knew that she risked a penalty.
7.7 The legitimate objectives of the contested law are the protection of the rights and
freedoms of others and the protection of public order, which are objectives set forth in
article 18 (3) of the Covenant. According to the State party, these aims are clearly defined
in the statement of purpose of the Act, which reaffirms the values of the Republic and the
requirements of living together. In this regard, the European Court of Human Rights, in its
judgment in the case of S.A.S. v. France, found that the prohibition could be justified only
insofar as it sought to guarantee the conditions for “living together”, described by the
Government of France as respect for the minimum requirements of life in society. The State
party argues that public spaces are the main place in which social life happens and people
come into contact with others. In such social interactions, the face plays a significant role,
since it is the part of the body that reflects one’s shared humanity with an interlocutor.
Showing one’s face not only signals a person’s readiness to be identified as an individual
by the other party, but also not to unfairly conceal the frame of mind in which they interact
with him or her, and is thus a manifestation of the minimum degree of trust that is essential
for living together in an egalitarian and open society such as France. The concealment of
the face prevents the identification of the person and is likely to impair interaction between
individuals and undermine the conditions for living together in diversity.
7.8 The State party submits that to ensure public safety and public order it must be
able to identify all individuals when necessary in order to avert threats to the security of
persons or property and to combat identity fraud. That implies that people reveal their faces,
a requirement that is all the more crucial in the context of the global threat of terrorism. 16
7.9 The State party contests the claim that the Act forbids Muslim women from
manifesting their religious beliefs through the wearing of the veil and stresses that it
prohibits only the full concealment of the face, regardless of the motive for doing so, and
allows any individual to wear in public clothes intended to express a religious belief, such
as headscarves or turbans, provided that they reveal the face. The problem here is very
different to that relating to the wearing of religious symbols by civil servants in the exercise
of their duties and the wearing of such symbols in schools, which concern the requirement
that the public service must be neutral. In the present instance, the prohibition is not based
on the religious connotation of the clothes in question, but on the simple fact that they fully
conceal the face. Only the extremely radical form of clothing, which results in the public
effacement of the person, is affected. It would not be difficult for the author to access the
public space wearing a veil that would demonstrate her religious beliefs without concealing
her face. In addition, the Constitutional Council has clarified that the prohibition should not
restrict the exercise of religious freedom in places of worship open to the public. Therefore,
the measure is proportionate to the objective pursued and the State party has not exceeded
its margin of appreciation in the present case, as stated by the European Court of Human
Rights in the aforementioned case of S.A.S. v. France. Moreover, the Court of Cassation
ruled in a judgment of 5 March 2013 that the Act was in conformity with article 9 of the
European Convention on Human Rights (freedom of thought, conscience and religion).
Lastly, the State party notes that the penalties provided in the Act, a maximum fine of 150
16 The State party cites the Committee’s Views in the case of R. Singh v. France, para. 8.4, in which the
Committee recognized the State party’s need to ensure and verify, for the purposes of maintaining
security and public order, that the person appearing in the photograph on a residence permit was the
rightful holder of that document.
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euros for a category two offence, are moderate and proportionate to the aims pursued. The
stipulated alternative penalty of attendance at a citizenship course is one that is typically
applied in French criminal law and may concern various offences; it is designed to remind
offenders of the republican values of tolerance and respect for human dignity and to make
them aware of their criminal and civil liability and of the obligations that life as a member
of society entails.
7.10 The Prime Minister’s circular of 31 March 2011, addressed to prefects, describes
the procedures whereby the offence may be dealt with by the police or the gendarmerie, and
indicates that under no circumstances does the Act grant officers the power to force an
individual to uncover his or her face. Accordingly, there is no question of a
disproportionate limitation of the right to religious freedom.
7.11 With regard to the author’s complaint of a violation of articles 12 and 26 of the
Covenant, the State party submits that the author has not established that the prohibition
introduced under the Act applies only to women who wear the full face veil and that
persons who conceal their faces by other means are not subjected to checks. On the
contrary, the Act provides for a general prohibition, is not aimed at any particular item of
clothing and makes no distinction between men and women. Moreover, the ban established
under the Act cannot in itself be discriminatory or prejudicial to freedom of movement
because it has an objective and reasonable justification.
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8.4 The Committee must therefore determine whether this restriction is authorized by
article 18 (3) of the Covenant. The Committee recalls that article 18 (3) permits restrictions
on the freedom to manifest religion or belief only if limitations are prescribed by law and
are necessary to protect public safety, order, health or morals, or the fundamental rights and
freedoms of others. 19 The Committee also recalls that paragraph 3 of article 18 is to be
strictly interpreted: restrictions are not allowed on grounds not specified there, even if they
would be allowed as restrictions to other rights protected in the Covenant, such as national
security. Limitations may be applied only for those purposes for which they were
prescribed and must be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they
are predicated. Restrictions may not be imposed for discriminatory purposes or applied in a
discriminatory manner.20
8.5 In the present case, the Committee notes that it is undisputed that the prohibition
against wearing the niqab falls clearly within the scope defined under article 1 of Act No.
2010-1192. It is therefore incumbent upon the Committee to assess whether the restriction,
which is prescribed by law, pursues a legitimate objective, is necessary for achieving that
objective, and is proportionate and non-discriminatory.
8.6 The Committee notes that the State party has indicated two objectives that the Act
is intended to pursue, namely the protection of public order and safety, and the protection of
the rights and freedoms of others.
8.7 With respect to protection of public order and safety, the State party contends that
it must be possible to identify all individuals when necessary to avert threats to the security
of persons or property and to combat identity fraud. The Committee recognizes the need for
States, in certain contexts, to be able to require that individuals show their faces, which
might entail one-off obligations for individuals to reveal their faces in specific
circumstances of a risk to public safety or order, or for identification purposes. The
Committee observes, however, that the Act is not limited to such contexts, but
comprehensively prohibits the wearing of certain face coverings in public at all times, and
that the State party has failed to demonstrate how wearing the full-face veil in itself
represents a threat to public safety or order that would justify such an absolute ban. Nor has
the State party provided any public safety justification or explanation for why covering the
face for certain religious purposes — i.e., the niqab — is prohibited, while covering the
face for numerous other purposes, including sporting, artistic, and other traditional and
religious purposes, is allowed. The Committee further observes that the State party has not
described any context, or provided any example, in which there was a specific and
significant threat to public order and safety that would justify such a blanket ban on the
full-face veil. No such threats are described in the statement of purpose of Act No. 2010-
1192 or in the National Assembly resolution of 11 May 2010, which preceded the adoption
of the Act.
8.8 Even if the State party could demonstrate the existence of a specific and significant
threat to public safety and order in principle, it has failed to demonstrate that the prohibition
contained in Act No. 2010-1192 is proportionate to that objective, in view of its
considerable impact on the author as a woman wearing the full-face veil. Nor has it
attempted to demonstrate that the ban was the least restrictive measure necessary to ensure
the protection of the freedom of religion or belief. 21
8.9 With regard to the second objective presented by the State party, understood as the
protection of the fundamental rights and freedoms of others under article 18 (3), the
Committee notes the State party’s argument based on the concept of “living together” or
respect for the minimum requirements of life in society, public spaces being the main place
in which social life happens and people come into contact with others. According to the
State party, showing one’s face signals a person’s readiness to be identified as an individual
by the other party and not to “unfairly” conceal one’s frame of mind, this being “the
minimum degree of trust that is essential for living together in an egalitarian and open
19 Ibid., para. 8.
20 Ibid.
21 E/CN.4/2006/5, para. 58.
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society”. The Committee also notes the author’s claim that the legislature did not clearly
define such an objective, either in the Act itself or in the statement of purpose. The
Committee recognizes it may be in a State’s interest to promote sociability and mutual
respect among individuals, in all their diversity, in its territory, and thus that the
concealment of the face could be perceived as a potential obstacle to such interaction.
8.10 However, the Committee observes that the protection of the fundamental rights
and freedoms of others requires identifying what specific fundamental rights are affected,
and the persons so affected. Article 18 (3) exceptions are to be interpreted strictly and not
applied in the abstract.22 In the present case, the Committee observes that the concept of
“living together” is very vague and abstract. The State party has not identified any specific
fundamental rights or freedoms of others that are affected by the fact that some people
present in the public space have their face covered, including fully veiled women. Nor has
the State party explained why such rights would be “unfairly” obstructed by wearing the
full-face veil, but not by covering the face in public through the numerous other means that
are exempted from the Act. The right to interact with any individual in public and the right
not to be disturbed by other people wearing the full-face veil are not protected by the
Covenant and therefore cannot provide the basis for permissible restrictions within the
meaning of article 18 (3).
8.11 Even assuming that the concept of living together could be considered a
“legitimate objective” in the sense of article 18 (3), the Committee observes that the State
party has failed to demonstrate that the criminal ban on certain means of covering of the
face in public, which constitutes a significant restriction of the rights and freedoms of the
author as a Muslim woman who wears the full-face veil, is proportionate to that aim, or that
it is the least restrictive means that is protective of religion or belief.
8.12 In the light of the foregoing, the Committee considers that the State party has
failed to demonstrate that the limitation of the author’s freedom to manifest her religion or
beliefs, through the wearing of the niqab, was necessary and proportionate within the
meaning of article 18 (3) of the Covenant. The Committee therefore concludes that the ban
introduced by Act No. 2010-1192 and the conviction of the author under said Act for
wearing the niqab violated the author’s rights under article 18 of the Covenant.
8.13 As to the author’s claims under article 26 of the Covenant, namely that the law in
question had the effect of indirectly discriminating against the minority of Muslim women
who wear the full-face veil, the Committee notes the State party’s argument that the
prohibition introduced by the Act is not based on the religious connotation of the clothes in
question, but on the fact that they conceal the face. According to the State party, only “the
extremely radical form of clothing, which results in the public effacement of the person” is
affected, meaning that for the author “it would not be difficult to access the public space
wearing a veil that would demonstrate her religious beliefs without concealing her face”.
The Committee notes, however, that the French National Assembly, in its resolution on the
commitment to uphold republican values in the face of the development of radical practices
that undermine them, considers that “radical practices detrimental to human dignity and
equality between men and women, including the wearing of a full-face veil, are contrary to
the values of the Republic” and that it would like “the fight against discrimination and the
promotion of equality between men and women to be priorities of public policy”. The
Committee further observes that Act No. 2010-1192, despite being drafted in general terms,
includes exceptions for most contexts of face-covering in public, thus limiting the
applicability of the ban to little more than the full-face Islamic veil, and that the Act has
been primarily enforced against women wearing the full-face veil. Hence, from the text of
the Act, the debate preceding its adoption and its implementation in practice, the
Committee observes that the Act is applied mainly to the full-face Islamic veil, which is a
form of religious observance and identification for a minority of Muslim women.
8.14 The Committee recalls its general comment No. 22 (para. 2), in which it viewed with
concern any tendency to discriminate against any religion or belief for any reason,
including the fact that they represented religious minorities that could be the subject of
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State party is obliged, inter alia, to provide the author with appropriate measures of
satisfaction and financial compensation for the injury suffered. The State party is also under
an obligation to prevent similar violations in the future, including by reviewing Act No.
2010-1192 in the light of its obligations under the Covenant, in particular articles 18 and
26.29
11. Bearing in mind that, by becoming a party to the Optional Protocol, the State party
has recognized the competence of the Committee to determine whether or not there has
been a violation of the Covenant and that, pursuant to article 2 of the Covenant, the State
party has undertaken to guarantee to all individuals within its territory or subject to its
jurisdiction the rights recognized in the Covenant and to provide an effective and
enforceable remedy when a violation has been established, the Committee wishes to receive
from the State party, within 180 days, information about the measures taken to give effect
to the present Views. The State party is also requested to publish the present Views and to
have them widely disseminated.
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Annex I
1. We agree with the majority of the Committee that France, the respondent State, did
not adequately explain a security rationale that could justify the blanket ban on Muslim
religious full-face coverage, especially in the light of the exceptions for other forms of full-
face coverage made under Act No. 2010-1192. We also agree with the majority that the
State party has not persuasively explained how the interest of “living together” could justify
compelling individuals belonging to a religious minority, under threat of criminal sanction,
to dress in a manner conducive to “normal” social interaction.
2. We are more receptive, however, to the implicit claim that the full veil is
discriminatory (para. 8.15), as we consider the wearing of the full veil to be a traditional
practice that has allowed men to subjugate women in the name of preserving their
“modesty”,1 which results in women not being entitled to occupy public space on the same
terms as men. We would therefore have no difficulty in regarding France as entitled — and,
in fact, under an obligation, pursuant to articles 2 (1), 3 and 26 of the Covenant, as well as
article 5 (a) of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against
Women — to take all appropriate measures to address this pattern of conduct so as to
ensure that it does not result in discrimination against women.
3. The question remains, however, whether the introduction of a blanket ban on the
full-face veil in public, enforced through a criminal sanction imposed on the very women
such a ban would purport to protect, is an appropriate measure in the circumstances of the
present case — that is, whether it was a reasonable and proportional measure directed
against the author and other Muslim women. On this matter, we are of the view that the
State party has not demonstrated to the Committee that less intrusive measures than the
blanket ban, such as education and awareness-raising against the negative implications of
wearing the full-face veil, criminalizing all forms of pressure on women to wear such a veil
and a limited ban enforced through appropriate non-criminal sanctions on wearing the full
veil in specific social contexts, underscoring the State’s opposition to the practice (such as
prohibiting the full-face veil for teachers in public schools or government employees
addressing the public), would not have resulted in sufficient modification of the practice of
wearing the full veil, while respecting the rights to privacy, autonomy and religious
freedom of the women themselves, including those who choose to wear the veil.
4. Given the harsh consequences of the full ban on the ability of women who choose to
wear the veil to move freely in public, we are not in a position to accept Act No. 2010-1192
as a reasonable and proportionate measure compatible with the Covenant. We believe that
our position on the high threshold for justifying a ban on clothing chosen by women is
generally consistent with the relevant parts of the European Court of Human Rights in its
judgment in S.A.S. v. France, in which the Court rejected a justification of the ban on the
grounds of, among others, anti-discrimination.2
1 See A/HRC/29/40, para. 19, in which the Working Group on the issue of discrimination against
women in law and in practice stated that conservative religious extremist movements imposed strict
modesty codes in order to subjugate women and girls in the name of religion.
2 S.A.S. v. France (application No. 43835/11), judgment of 1 July 2014, paras. 118–120.
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Annex II
1. We concur with the majority opinion. Regarding the stated aim of promoting public
safety and order, we consider that the State party has not only failed to establish a
comprehensive, significant and specific threat that would justify a blanket ban on wearing
the full-face veil in public (para. 8.7), but has also not explained in which ways the State
party’s previously existing legislation providing for uncovering one’s face in public space
for specific purposes or at specific times, such as security checks and identity checks, or in
specific locations, such as schools and hospitals — which are not contested here — is not
adequate to ensure public safety and order. Thus, in addition to the criminal nature of the
sanction and its effect on the author and those Muslim women who, like her, choose to
wear the full-face veil, which is not proportionate to the stated aim (para. 8.11), this blanket
ban has not been shown to be either necessary or proportionate to its stated legitimate aim
of promoting public safety.
2. With respect to protecting the fundamental rights and freedoms of others and the
concept of “living together” that the State party relates to this aim, there is a lack of clarity
regarding which fundamental rights are specifically intended to be protected (para. 8.10).
The State party’s position is also unclear on how respect for the rights of persons belonging
to minorities, including religious minorities, are taken into account in this concept in order
to safeguard the value of pluralism and avoid the abuse of a dominant position by the
majority.1 This reinforces the doubts about the claim that the concept of “living together”
constitutes a legitimate aim under the fundamental rights and freedom of others in article 18
(3) of the Covenant.
3. Although the State party does not explicitly refer to equality between men and
women in its arguments, in the background documents from the national debates and the
preparatory work in the National Assembly, equality figured as a significant factor in the
adoption of this legislation. In this regard, the argument that the full-face veil is inherently
oppressive and stems from the patriarchal subjugation of women, which intends to prevent
them from participating as equals in society, is relevant. However, in view of the fact that
another criminal provision in article 4 of the same law, which is not contested, penalizes the
serious offence of compelling a person to wear such a veil, the argument as applied to the
comprehensive ban on wearing the veil seems to imply that whenever a woman dons a full-
face veil it cannot be her own informed and autonomous decision, which may reinforce a
stereotype that Muslim women are oppressed. Penalizing wearing the full-face veil in order
to protect women could thus, instead of promoting gender equality, potentially contribute to
the further stigmatization of Muslim women who choose to wear the full-face veil, as well
as more broadly of Muslims, based on a stereotypical perception of the role of women
among Muslims. In any case, the State or the majority’s view that the practice is oppressive
must accommodate the author’s own explicit choice to wear certain clothing in public to
manifest her religious belief.2 The equality argument is thus not convincing as a legitimate
aim for a blanket prohibition of full-face veils in all public spaces in France.
4. Finally, the present Views take into account the specific context of the case in
France, including the fact that a very small number of women have chosen to wear the full
veil. Apart from the inherent vulnerability to negative stereotyping of members of a
1 See European Court of Human Rights, S.A.S. v. France (application No. 43835/11), judgment of 1
July 2014, para. 127.
2 See A/68/290, para. 74 (d), in which the Special Rapporteur on freedom of religion or belief stated
that policies designed to empower individuals exposed to gender-related discrimination could not
claim credibility unless they paid careful attention to the self-understandings, interests and
assessments voiced by the concerned persons themselves, including women from religious minorities.
That principle should always be observed, in particular before setting legislative or jurisdictional
limits to a right to freedom, for example the right to wear religious garments.
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Annex III
1. In both cases set out in communications Nos. 2747/2016 and 2807/2016 the
Committee notes that the State party, by adopting Act No. 2010-1192 of 11 October 2010,
prohibiting the concealment of the face in public, has violated the rights of the authors
under articles 18 and 26 of the Covenant. I regret that I am unable to share this opinion for
the following reasons.
2. Firstly, I am surprised at the Committee’s statement that “the State party has not
demonstrated how wearing the full-face veil in itself poses a threat to public safety or
public order that would justify such an absolute ban”. I shall not dwell on the threat to
public safety, which appears self-evident given the ongoing battle against terrorists, some
of whom have carried out attacks and assassinations in France and elsewhere disguised with
niqabs. Security considerations alone justify both prohibition and criminalization. I shall
however spend more time on the meaning of the phrase “protect order” read conjointly with
“protect the morals or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others” in article 18 (3) of
the Covenant.
3. In that article, the term “order” clearly refers to that of the State at the origin of the
restriction. In France, under its Constitution, the order is republican, secular and democratic.
Equality between men and women is among the most fundamental principles of that order,
just as it is among the most fundamental principles of the Covenant. The niqab in itself is a
symbol of the stigmatization and degrading of women and as such contrary to the
republican order and gender equality in the State party, but also to articles 3 and 26 of the
Covenant. Defenders of the niqab reduce women to their primary biological status as
females, as sexual objects, flesh without mind or reason, potentially to blame for cosmic
and moral disorder, and in consequence obliged to remove themselves from the male gaze
and thus be virtually banished from the public space. A democratic State cannot allow such
stigmatization, which sets them apart from all other women. Wearing the niqab violates the
“fundamental rights and freedoms of others”, or, more precisely, the rights of other women
and of women as such. Its prohibition is therefore not contrary to the Covenant.
4. I agree with the Committee that the restrictions provided for under article 18 (3)
must be interpreted strictly. However, “strictly” does not mean that the restrictions need not
respect the other provisions of the Covenant, or the spirit of article 18 itself, as we have
explained in the preceding paragraph.
5. The Committee admits in both cases that “wearing the niqab or the burqa amounts to
wearing a garment that is customary for a segment of the Muslim faithful and that it is the
performance of a rite or practice of a religion”. However, the Committee does not explain
the mysterious transformation of a custom into a religious obligation as part of worship,
within the meaning of article 18 of the Covenant. The truth is that the wearing of the niqab
or the burka is a custom followed in certain countries called “Muslim countries” that, under
the influence of political Islamism and a growing puritanism, has been artificially linked to
certain verses from the Qur’an, in particular to verse 31 of the Surah of Light and verse 59
of the Surah of the Confederates. However, the most knowledgeable authorities on Islam do
not recognize concealing the face as a religious obligation. Even allowing, as the
Committee wishes to do, that the wearing of the niqab may be interpreted as an expression
of freedom of religion, it must not be forgotten that not all interpretations are equal in the
eyes of a democratic society that has founded its legal system on human rights and the
principles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and of the Covenant, and that has
enshrined the principle of secularism within its Constitution — all the more so given the
particular historical and legal context of France. Certain interpretations simply cannot be
tolerated.
6. The same holds true for polygamy, excision, inequality in inheritance, repudiation of
a wife, a husband’s right to discipline his wife, and levirate or sororate practices. All those
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constitute, for their practitioners, religious obligations or rites, just as wearing the full-face
veil does for followers of that custom. But the Committee has always considered the former
practices to be contrary to the provisions of the Covenant and has consistently called on
States to abolish them. Surely then it is contradictory to decide in one case that it is the
prohibition of one such practice, which undermines equality between citizens and the
dignity of women, that contravenes the Covenant, while deciding in another case that it is
the practices that contravene article 18?
7. A more serious problem must be raised. It concerns the concept of “living together”
championed by France and which led to the adoption of Act No. 2010/1102. I entirely
disagree with the Committee that “the concept of ‘living together’ is presented by the State
party in very vague and abstract terms” and that “the State party has not identified any
specific fundamental rights or freedoms of others that are affected”. On the contrary, the
preamble to the Act deals fully with this issue and clearly states that concealment of the
face goes against the social contract, basic good manners, and the notions of fraternity and
living together. Unfortunately, the Committee fails to note that the fundamental right that is
violated in this instance is not that of a few individuals, nor of any particular group, but the
right of society as a whole to recognize its members by their faces, which are also a token
of our social and, indeed, our human, nature. Contrary to the Committee’s assertions, the
concept of living together is neither vague nor abstract, but rather, precise and specific. It is
founded on the very simple idea that a democratic society can only function in full view of
all. More generally, as I have already suggested, the most basic human communication,
preceding language of any other kind, is conveyed by the face. By totally and permanently
concealing our faces in public, especially in a democratic context, we renounce our own
social nature and sever our links with our peers. To prohibit the wearing of the full-face veil
and penalize it with a small fine is therefore neither excessive nor disproportionate. In this
connection, there can be no comparison between the hijab and the niqab. The two are
essentially different.
8. By considering that “the criminal ban introduced by article 1 of Act No. 2010-1192
disproportionately affects Muslim women who, like the author, choose to wear the full-face
veil and introduces a distinction between these women and other persons who may legally
cover their face in public that is not necessary and proportionate to a legitimate interest, and
is therefore unreasonable”, the Committee is simply turning rights upside down. It
concludes from this reasoning that article 1 of the Act constitutes a kind of intersectional
discrimination based on sex and religion that violates article 26 of the Covenant. Yet there
is no doubt that prohibition is necessary, if only because of the threat to security (see para. 2
above); it is also proportionate, as shown by the light penalty: a fine of 150 euros and a
course in citizenship, richly deserved given the seriousness of the infringement of equality
between citizens and of the dignity of women.
9. Let us now turn to the question of those persons who, unlike women who wear the
full-face veil, are authorized by Act No. 2010/1192 to cover their faces. This, according to
the Committee’s Views, constitutes discrimination under article 26 of the Covenant. These
are the persons referred to in article 2.II of the Act, which establishes exceptions to the
prohibition. Can these exceptions be placed on an equal footing and compared with the
practice of wearing the full-face veil? Is article 2 of Act No. 2010/1192 discriminatory
within the meaning of article 26? I do not think so. These exceptions, generally speaking
circumstantial and temporary, are for the most part made for recreational, festive, carnival
or sporting purposes, or are required for service or security purposes, in particular road
safety. They exist in all countries and in no way constitute discriminatory symbols or
messages likely to trigger implementation of article 26 of the Covenant, as the full-face veil
would.
10. I conclude that the prohibition of the wearing of the full-face veil and its
penalization by fine, especially in the French context, is neither contrary to article 18 nor to
article 26 of the Covenant.
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Annex IV
1. I regret not being able to share the conclusion, reached by the majority of the
Committee, that the State party violated the authors’ rights under articles 18 and 26 of the
Covenant.
2. Both cases concern the use of niqab and are the first of their kind to be considered
by the Committee. The issue is a very sensitive one and a solution should therefore be
reached thoughtfully, due to its far-reaching implications.
3. Significantly enough, the two complaints do not concern an Islamic State, but a
European one with a strong democratic tradition and an impressive human rights record.
Possible solutions are dilemmatic, since persuasive arguments can be invoked both for and
against finding a violation of certain rights. Decisions in both cases will have, apart from
the underlying legal issues, a significant political impact, not only for France, but for many
other countries in Europe, Africa and Asia, where the problem of the use of the niqab may
also arise. The question was thus to find a solution that minimized the harm, while taking
into account all the relevant factors and preventing the risk of any unwarranted and abusive
interpretation of the Committee’s decision.
4. I tend to consider the complaints in both cases as mostly artificial, using the
argument of a restriction of freedom of thought, conscience and religion as a means to
address what is foremost a political problem. The authors never explain which religious
prescriptions impose the use of the niqab on them or which part of the Qur’an they base
their conclusions on. Yet they acknowledge that wearing the niqab or the burka amounts to
wearing a garment that is customary for a segment of the Muslim faithful and is an act
motivated by religious beliefs. Therefore, it concerns the observance and practice of a
religion, notwithstanding the fact that wearing the niqab or the burka is not a religious
requirement common to all practising Muslims (para. 3.2). We are therefore facing a
religious custom, not an undisputed religious obligation.
5. The Committee has in the past refused to accept as violations of the provisions of the
Covenant certain social or religious customs and practices that run counter to human rights
(female genital mutilation, honour and ritual killings, attacks against persons with albinism
and many others). Therefore, the fact that the authors invoke a violation of their religious
beliefs does not necessarily lead to the conclusion that their rights have been violated.
6. Both authors are French nationals born and domiciled in France. Yet, they refuse to
abide by the prevalent legislation of the State party concerned, although they acknowledge
that they belong to a minority of Muslim women who wear the full-face veil. According to
a parliamentary commission that studied the matter, fewer than 2,000 women are concerned
(paras. 3.3 and 3.14), which constitutes a tiny minority (para. 3.9). They consider that such
a tiny minority can impose their beliefs on the rest of the population, but do not wish to
acknowledge the same right to the rest of the population, which, in terms of a
proportionality test, seems quite disturbing, especially as both authors can use, still within
the observance of their religious beliefs, other less rigorous and extreme forms of dressing,
such as a headscarf. This extreme and radical form of religious belief should, in my view,
be considered with caution so as to allow the Committee to reach a fair and reasonable
decision, which unfortunately, in the present case, did not occur.
7. When one encounters a given society, the need for respecting its habits and customs
should be a natural concern, as well as respect for social predominant values. Even more so,
when one has a standing relationship with such a society, as is the case for both authors.
Yet the authors refuse to accept this.
8. It falls within the legitimate powers of each State to democratically define the
legislative framework of their societies, while respecting their international obligations. The
State party has carefully done so. Act No. 2010-1192 was passed unanimously (bar one
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vote) by the National Assembly and Senate after a wide-ranging democratic debate. A
parliamentary task force was set up involving elected representatives from across the
political spectrum, which proceeded to hear many persons of diverse opinions, including
both Muslim and non-Muslim women and persons from civil society (para. 5.1).1 On 11
May 2010 — prior to the adoption of the law — the National Assembly adopted a
resolution in which it said that radical practices detrimental to human dignity and equality
between men and women, including the wearing of a full-face veil, were contrary to the
values of the Republic, and called for the implementation of all possible measures to ensure
the effective protection of women subjected to violence or pressure, including by being
forced to wear a full-face veil (para. 5.2).2
9. The general ban introduced by the Act is limited in scope, given that only the
concealment of the face is prohibited. Sanctions are measured, lawmakers having
prioritized the role of education (para. 5.3).3 The ban covers any article of clothing intended
to conceal the face in public spaces, regardless of the form it takes or the reason for wearing
it (para. 5.5),4 and does not target any specific article of clothing and makes no distinction
between men and women (para. 5.11). 5 Therefore, no special treatment is reserved for
garments worn for religious or cultural reasons and only the most radical form of clothing
that makes the person invisible in public is affected. The ban cannot restrict the exercise of
religious freedom in places of worship open to the public (para. 5.9). 6 Exemptions from the
Act include clothing worn for health or professional reasons, part of sporting, artistic, or
traditional festivities or events, including religious processions, or that otherwise is legally
authorized (para. 7.2),7 which confirm the general and reasonable character of the ban. A
circular of 2 March 2011 provided a comprehensive explanation of the scope and
modalities for the application of the law, complemented by a campaign in public places and
a leaflet available in government offices, as well as an educational website. Moreover, the
law provided for a period of six months from the time of its enactment to its entry into force
to meet the predictability requirement (para. 5.6).8
10. The Act pursues a legitimate aim, the protection of the rights and freedoms of others
and the protection of public order, as clearly defined in the Act’s statement of purpose,
which reaffirms the values of the Republic and the requirements of living together (para.
5.7).9 The European Court of Human Rights, in its judgment in S.A.S. v. France, accepted
the observance of the minimum requirements of life in society as part of the protection of
the rights and freedoms of others, and so concluded that the ban imposed was proportionate
to the aim pursued (paras. 140–159).
11. Public safety and public order require that everyone can be identified if need be, to
prevent attacks on the security of persons and property and to combat identity fraud. This
implies that people must show their faces, a vital concern in the context of current
international terrorist threats (para. 5.8).10 The Committee, failing to address the underlying
problem properly, does not seem to have sufficiently weighed this last requirement (para.
7.7).11
12. It is true that the Court in the S.A.S. judgment dismissed the argument that the ban
was necessary, in a democratic society, for public safety, since “a blanket ban on the
wearing in public places of clothing designed to conceal the face can be regarded as
proportionate only in a context where there is a general threat to public safety” (para. 139).
However, since the judgment was delivered, France has experienced several terrorist
attacks by Al-Qaida and Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant: Île-de-France in January 2015
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(20 killed, 22 injured), Paris in November 2015 (137 killed, 368 injured) and Nice in July
2016 (87 killed, 434 injured). In 2017, a total of 205 foiled, failed and completed terrorist
attacks were reported by nine European Union member States (France experienced 54
attacks). In 2017, a total of 975 individuals were arrested in the European Union for
terrorism-related offences. Most arrests (705 out of 791) were related to jihadist terrorism
(123 women, of whom 64 per cent held the citizenship of a European Union member State
and were born in the Union. France alone accounted for 411 arrests and 114 convictions. As
for the number of suspects arrested for religiously inspired/jihadist terrorism (705), France
accounted for 373.12 In this context, it is of extreme importance to quickly identify and
locate possible suspects, since they travel through different countries to arrive at their
destination and may avail themselves of the niqab to go unnoticed. Therefore, in the current
circumstances, the ban imposed seems proportionate to the aim pursued by the Act,
although it should be subject to periodic risk assessments (art. 7 of the Act).
13. In contrast to the view of the majority of the Committee (para. 7.16), I believe that
the sanctions are measured. Although they are of a criminal nature in France, in other
countries they would probably be administrative fines. Sanctions comprise a category two
fine (maximum €150), a moderate sanction that can, however, be replaced by a mandatory
citizenship course. If, however, the person refuses to abide by the law, what should the
State do? Accept such a behaviour? In the Yaker case, the author was sentenced twice, the
second time because she refused to remove her full-face veil at the security checkpoint to
enter the court. Is it reasonable to force a judge to accept a person that he or she is going to
judge to have his or her face covered during the trial? Such a demand will probably not be
accepted in any court, in whichever country. Furthermore, both cases were tried by a
community court, which confirms, if need be, the minor gravity of the violation. Sanctions
are thus not disproportionate.
14. Finally, as regards the allegation that penalties have been imposed in particular on
Islamic women, the reason seems obvious: they violated the ban. Would one consider, for
instance, the prosecution of drunk drivers or drug traffickers as disproportionately affecting
them? Is this not just the result of law enforcement policy?
15. I would therefore conclude that articles 18 and 26 of the Covenant were not violated.
Rejecting the ban could, regrettably, be seen by some States as just a step away from
accepting the imposition of a full-face veil policy.
12 European Union Agency for Law Enforcement Cooperation, European Union Terrorism Situation
and Trend Report 2018 (The Hague, 2018).
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