"THEY SWEAR,STARE,SPIT AND TELL US TO GO HOME. THEY CALL US TERRORISTS" MUSLIM WOMEN CLAIM THERE ARE NO GO AREAS FOR NIQABIS IN LEICESTER,UK





Muslim women who wear a full veil say there are no-go areas in Leicester which they feel frightened to visit – even in a car.



They claim they are subjected to abuse every day and that it is getting increasingly difficult to avoid such incidents in the city centre.



The revelations are contained in a new book by two criminology lecturers at the University of Leicester.



More than 100 Leicester-based Muslim women were interviewed over a 12-month period for the book, called Islamophobia, Victimisation and the Veil.



One woman who took part in the study told the Mercury: “People feel free to have a pop at us every day.



“They swear, stare, spit and tell us to go home. They call us terrorists.”



The woman, who did not want to be named, said: “There are areas in Leicester we don’t go to, even in a car.



“It is also becoming more difficult to wear the niqab in the city centre. I don’t go in any more unless I really have to.”




The woman added: “I am as British as anyone. We follow the football and the tennis at home. My boys try to make a joke of it calling me ‘Ninja mum’.



“We had thought that if we ignore it, it would go away. It hasn’t.”



The book was written by Dr Irene Zempi and Neil Chakraborti.



Dr Zempi wore a niqab for a month to understand what her interviewees experienced.



“Attitudes to me changed over night,” she said. “People were abusive and threatening, and where previously shop assistants were friendly, they simply ignored me.



“I did not want to go out and I became depressed.”



She added: “The level of abuse that participants faced depended upon whether they were in their local community or whether they were leaving their ‘comfort zone’.



“Some participants referred to ‘no-go zones’ for Muslims in Leicester such as the traditionally white areas of Braunstone, Beaumont Leys, Saffron Lane, New Parks, Hamilton and even Leicester city centre.”



Many of the women interviewed said they had moved to the city in the belief that Leicester would provide a better life for them and their families.



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