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Pauline Hanson caused a commotion by arriving at the Senate chamber for the daily question time session dressed in a black burqa at Parliament House in Canberra. Image Credit: AP

Sydney: The leader of Australia’s right wing One Nation party has been rebuked by the Turnbull government for entering the Senate chamber wearing a black burqa.

Pauline Hanson caused a commotion by arriving at the Senate chamber for the daily question time session dressed in a black burqa, which was designed to underscore a call she intended to make to ban the religious garment, citing national security concerns.

But Hanson was rebuked sharply for her behaviour.


The leader of the government in the Senate, the attorney-general George Brandis, told the One Nation leader the ruling Coalition had no intention of banning the burqa.

In remarks that secured him a standing ovation from the opposition Labour party, and the Greens party, as well as other cross-bench senators, Brandis warned Hanson against indulging in behaviour that Muslim Australians would find offensive.

Stunt

“Senator Hanson, no, we will not be banning the burqa,” Brandis told the Senate on Thursday.

“Senator Hanson, I’m not going to pretend to ignore the stunt that you have tried to pull today by arriving in the chamber dressed in a burqa when we all know you are not an adherent of the Islamic faith.

“I would caution you and counsel you, Senator Hanson, with respect, to be very very careful of the offence you may do to the religious sensibilities of other Australians.”

AP

In this combination of photos Senator Pauline Hanson takes off a burqa she wore into the Senate chamber at Parliament House in Canberra, Australia, yesterday. Hanson, leader of the anti-Muslim, anti-immigration One Nation minor party, sat wearing the garment for more than 10 minutes before taking it off as she rose to explain that she wanted such outfits banned on security grounds. Her action was derided by mainstream politicians.


“We have about half a million Australians in this country of the Islamic faith, and the vast majority of them are law abiding, good Australians, and Senator Hanson, it is absolutely consistent with being a good law-abiding Australian and a strict, adherent, Muslim.”

Brandis reminded Hanson that as attorney-general, he held pre-eminent portfolio responsibility for national security, and the advice from intelligence agencies was clear — countering the risks of extremism required close cooperation with the Islamic community.

The attorney-general, who was clearly infuriated by Hanson’s behaviour, rebuked her sharply for causing offence to a faith community. “To ridicule that community, to drive it into a corner, to mock its religious garments, is an appalling thing to do, and I would ask you to reflect on your behaviour.”

Hanson smiled throughout Brandis’ answer, and visibly delighted with the commotion caused by her intervention, left the Senate chamber shortly after her designated question.

The Brandis rebuke prompted Labour, Greens and some cross-benchers to stand and applaud. Some but not all government MPs also applauded but kept their seats. The leader of the opposition in the Senate, the Labour senator Penny Wong, said if the standing orders permitted, she would have issued a vote of thanks to Brandis for his remarks.

Wong, also clearly infuriated, told Hanson: “It is one thing to wear religious dress as a sincere act of faith and another to wear it here as a stunt in the Senate chamber.”

Hanson’s call for the banning of the burqa prompted disorderly interjections from across the chamber.

The One Nation leader’s question was posed to Brandis along the following lines: “In light of our national security of this nation, will [the government] work with me to actually ban the burqa in Australia considering there have been 13 foiled national threats against us with terrorism, three that have been successful that Australians have lost their lives?

“Terrorism is a true threat to our country. Many Australians are in fear of it. What I would like to ask on behalf of the Australian people, considering there has been a large majority of Australians wish to see the banning of the burqa.”

The Labour senator Sam Dastyari, who is of Iranian heritage, and a non-practising Muslim, shouted that Hanson was a threat to national security, and a “disgrace”.

Another Labour MP interjected that Hanson would next enter the chamber wearing a white hood — a reference to white supremacist groups.

Hanson later took to Facebook to double down on her behaviour in the parliament. Hanson’s One Nation party proposes anti-Islamic policies including a ban on Muslim immigration, and a royal commission into Islam. Hanson has also called for a Trump-style travel ban on Muslims entering Australia.