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    Home > Headlines > New Italian bill targets Islamic face coverings and religious funding
    Headlines

    New Italian bill targets Islamic face coverings and religious funding

    Published by Global Banking and Finance Review

    Posted on October 8, 2025

    3 min read

    Last updated: January 21, 2026

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    Tags:Islamic financecomplianceregulatory framework

    Quick Summary

    Italy proposes a bill to ban burqas and niqabs in public, aiming to combat cultural separatism and enhance religious funding transparency.

    Table of Contents

    • Overview of the Proposed Legislation
    • Details of the Face Covering Ban
    • Financial Transparency for Religious Organizations
    • Criminal Provisions and Penalties

    Italy Proposes Legislation to Ban Burqas and Niqabs in Public Spaces

    Overview of the Proposed Legislation

    ROME (Reuters) -Italy's ruling Brothers of Italy party put forward legislation on Wednesday to ban the burqa and niqab in public spaces, part of a broader bill aimed at combating what it called "cultural separatism" linked to Islam.

    Details of the Face Covering Ban

    The bill, presented to parliament by lawmakers from Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's party, would prohibit garments covering the face in all public places, schools, universities, shops, and offices nationwide.

    Financial Transparency for Religious Organizations

    The burqa is a full-body garment that covers a woman from head to foot, including a mesh screen over the eyes. The niqab is a veil for the face that leaves the area around the eyes clear.

    Criminal Provisions and Penalties

    Violators would face fines of 300 to 3,000 euros ($350-$3,500).

    The legislation was aimed at combating "religious radicalisation and religiously-motivated hatred", the introductory text said.

    FRANCE FIRST EUROPEAN COUNTRY TO BAN BURQAS COMPLETELY

    France was the first European country to introduce a blanket ban on wearing burqas in public in 2011.

    The list has expanded significantly since, with more than 20 states around the world implementing some form of ban on the burqa and other full-face coverings in public, including Austria, Tunisia, Turkey, Sri Lanka and Switzerland.

    The European Court of Human Rights has consistently upheld these bans, including in 2017, when it upheld Belgium's bar on burqas and full-face veils, ruling that states may restrict such garments to protect "living together" in society.

    Regions of Italy already impose restrictions, such as the northern one of Lombardy, which imposed a ban on entering public buildings and hospitals with covered faces in late 2015.

    The legislation extends beyond face coverings to impose new financial transparency requirements on religious organisations that lack formal agreements with the Italian state.

    No Muslim organisations currently have such agreements, leaving Islam without the formal recognition granted to 13 other religious groups. Under the proposed law, unrecognised groups will have to disclose all funding sources, with financing restricted to entities that pose no threat to state security.

    The bill also introduces several new criminal provisions, including penalties for virginity testing, while strengthening punishment for forced marriages by adding religious coercion as grounds for prosecution.

    Meloni's coalition partner the League presented more limited legislation focusing on face coverings earlier this year. It is currently under review in a parliamentary commission and it was not clear if it would be merged with this new bill proposal.

    The coalition has a strong majority in parliament, meaning such legislation should find backing, although there was no immediate timetable for its debate.($1 = 0.8600 euros)

    (Reporting by Angelo Amante and Crispian Balmer, editing by Ed Osmond)

    Key Takeaways

    • •Italy proposes a ban on burqas and niqabs in public spaces.
    • •The bill aims to combat cultural separatism linked to Islam.
    • •Violators face fines ranging from 300 to 3,000 euros.
    • •Introduces financial transparency for religious organizations.
    • •Strengthens penalties for forced marriages and virginity testing.

    Frequently Asked Questions about New Italian bill targets Islamic face coverings and religious funding

    1What is a burqa?

    A burqa is a full-body garment worn by some Muslim women that covers the entire body, including a mesh screen over the eyes.

    2What is a niqab?

    A niqab is a type of veil worn by some Muslim women that covers the face, leaving only the area around the eyes visible.

    3What is financial transparency?

    Financial transparency refers to the openness and clarity of financial information provided by organizations, allowing stakeholders to understand their financial activities and sources of funding.

    4What are criminal provisions?

    Criminal provisions are legal rules that define certain actions as crimes and outline the penalties for those actions.

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