Italy’s right-wing party prepares draft law to ban Muslim prayer spaces outside of mosques
ATHENS (AA): A right-wing coalition party in the Italian government led by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has prepared a draft law intended to ban Muslim prayer spaces outside of mosques.
The bill proposed by the Brothers of Italy (FdI) party, which is currently being debated in the parliament’s environment committee, aims to prohibit the use of garages and industrial warehouses as mosques, the daily ’24 Ore’ has reported.
Cultural and religious organizations that have not signed an agreement with the Italian state will not be allowed to use a property as a place of worship, the daily said, adding that the country’s Muslim community has not signed any such agreement with the state.
The bill, according to the daily, was opposed by lawmakers from opposition parties in the parliament’s environment committee, who said if it were passed, it would restrict freedom of religion.
Sami Salem, the ‘imam’ or prayer leader at the Magliana Mosque in Rome, told the daily that the bill “clearly discriminates against Muslims and does not respect the Italian Constitution that protects all citizens living in Italy.”
Izzeddin Elzir, another ‘imam’ of the Muslim community in the northern province of Florence, expressed his concerns about the legality of the draft law.