BBC News and CNN (disable CSS if page appears blank) report that the Council of State, a French administrative court, has suspended the ban on "burkini" swimsuits enacted in the town of Villeneuve-Loubet. The court has not yet decided whether the ban is legal or not. In the ruling, the court said that the ban "seriously and clearly illegally breached fundamental freedoms." Several other towns have recently enacted similar bans.
The Guardian (safe for work) reported on an incident in Nice in which the ban was enforced: police appeared to make a sunbather remove part of her suit.
previously:
The French Solution - or How I Learned to Laugh More (subtitle: Cannes Bans "Burkinis" Over Suspected Link to Radical Islamism)
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 28 2016, @07:46PM
There is nothing wrong with the religious statement being made by females wearing certain clothing in public.
Making religious statements should not be illegal. Shocking/offending others should not be illegal. If you look at a piece of clothing and become afraid, that's your own issue. Banning people from wearing certain clothing because of how others react to it is an action only an authoritarian hellhole would take.