Zeynab Alshelh travelled from Sydney several weeks ago with her parents to show solidarity with Muslims in France, equipped with Australian-designed burkinis in the French national colours to give away.
This cartoon perfectly sums up the burkini ban
As she and her mother, clad in blue burkinis, and her father settled down under a large pink beach umbrella, a man threatened to call police and a blonde woman gave the family a thumbs-down, the footage from Australia's Channel Seven showed.
"It's upsetting, it's not fair," she told the programme that aired on Sunday. "We were threatened by locals to leave the beach and if we didn't, they were going to call the police. They weren't happy with us being there. They are seeing something that is not there." Channel Seven did not immediately respond to a request from Reuters for comment.
French burkini ban maintained in Corsican village
A judge in the Mediterranean city of Nice this month declared the prohibition of the full-body swimwear to be illegal there, in the latest setback to attempts to ban burkini-clad women from the beaches of the Riviera.
Nice, where 86 people died in an Islamic State militant attack in July, was one of about 30 towns in the largely right-wing part of the country to ban the burkini on the grounds that it presented a threat to public order.
French Muslim body to meet with govt on burkini ban
"I thought the ban was ridiculous. It just doesn't make sense to me, there's no connection at all between the burkini and these terrorist acts," the Australian woman said.
The controversy over the swimwear, coupled with several militant attacks in France since January 2015, has filtered into early campaigning for the April 2017 presidential election, making French cultural identity and security highly-charged issues.
The Australian designer of the burkini, predominantly worn by Muslim women, told Reuters last month that sales of the garment had increased after three French cities banned it.
"Why would they ban something when I designed a swimsuit that was part of integration with the Australian lifestyle?" the designer, Aheda Zanetti, told the program.
Zanetti estimated that 40 per cent of her sales go to non-Muslim women, with cancer survivors, body conscious mothers or women who want to protect their skin from the sun among them.
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