The Netherlands became the ninth EU member country prohibiting Burka after "masks" were removed in public places such as schools, hospitals, public transportation facilities.
Muslim veils and robes such as Burka and Nicab are affected by the ban, but do not cover the scarf just covering the hair.
Yesterday the national parliament was finally approved in the vote, and the right - most activist claimed that it was a big victory.
The new law is expressed by the government as "religiously neutral", and it is not widely prohibited as much as other European countries.
Measures have been taken to hide the face in several areas of Spain and Italy, German judges, civil servants and soldiers must eliminate them for identification.
However, police can ask individuals to remove mask masks for identification, but Burka's ban does not apply to public roads.
Annelies Moors, Professor of Anthropology and Sociology at the University of Amsterdam, said: "This is actually a complete ban as the only women's space wearing burca is the street and the private sector."
The rightmost senator Marjolein Faber - Van de Klashorst called this "a historic day as it was the first step towards Islamization in the Netherlands."
There is no similar law in Britain, but in 2013 the judge created a legal history by providing evidence that a court 's defendant had taken off her veil.
Judge Peter Murphy thinks this is because the judge can observe and observe all the witnesses of the incident.
This movement was endorsed by former Attorney General Jack Straw, who caused a disturbance when Burka insisted that the relationship with the community was banned in 2006.
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The law on veil of whole face has become more common, especially in Europe over the past three years. Currently, six countries are adopting domestic law prohibiting partial or complete veil in public places. The most recent one voted in June to partially ban the use of veil in schools and hospitals, not in public roads, in the Netherlands. France began demanding a law to ban the veil in public places and introduced the first ban in Europe in 2011. At that time, French President Nicolas Sarkozy pointed out that it is a nationwide advisory report that covering the mesh from head to toe worn in the eyes of Afghanistan is "signs of yield and depreciation" . "
The Union and the opposition party rejected the request of Burka's ban. However, controversial laws have been introduced in some countries, but the latest ones were banned in full in July 2016. This means that women wearing burka (eye-covered mesh) or niqab (gaps covering the whole body) may face a fine of 10,000 euros. France was the first European country banning Buruka. It began in 2004 with the aim of fighting students from state-run schools and displaying all kinds of religious symbols. However, in April 2011 the government further banned the full veil more publicly. President Nicolas Sarkozy says they are 'unpopular' in France