A French appeals
court has upheld a ruling denying an Algerian woman citizenship after she
refused to shake the hand of a senior official.
The woman, who has not been named, said her "religious
beliefs" prevented her from shaking the hand of the male official in the
citizenship ceremony.
A government ruling said it showed she was "not
assimilated into the French community" and denied her citizenship.
She appealed, but France 's highest administrative
court upheld the ruling.
The Algerian woman has been married to a French man since
2010.
At her 2016 citizenship ceremony in the south-eastern Isère
region, around Grenoble ,
she refused to shake hands with the presiding senior official or a local
politician.
In Islamic teaching, handshakes between unrelated men and
women are usually prohibited.
The government then denied her naturalisation, saying she
was "not assimilated" for avoiding the symbolic ritual.
This is one of the reasons the state can deny citizenship to
the spouse of a national under the country's civil code.
The Algerian woman called the decision an "abuse of
power", but the Council of State has upheld the ruling.
Source: BBC
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