Monday, December 26, 2011

France bans Europes tallest minaret called Sarkozy

The name of the minaret is in protest at the president's decision to close a Gaulish place of worship.
Rachid Nekkaz, the employer paid for the land it would rise half a million euros.


The French authorities banned a businessman raised in a town outside Paris a minaret of 35 meters, the highest in Europe, which sought to baptize in the name of President Gallo, Nicolas Sarkozy , to protest the decision to close a of worship.

The provocative project businessman Rachid Nekkaz, crashed with the Prefecture of the Hauts-de-Seine department Sarkozy, who refused permission to raise the pharaonic work in Gennevilliers, on Sunday newspaper reported Le Parisien .

Nekkaz, former presidential candidate and founder of the French association "Touch not my Constitution" very combative against the law to ban the burka wear on the street, bought the land on which stands the place of worship intended to close the authorities.

He did it with another leader of the associative sector from depressed neighborhoods on the outskirts of Paris, an initiative by pursuing attention by the closure of a place where, according to them, local Muslims prayed every Friday from For over 30 years.

They paid for the land half a million euros , according to Le Parisien , which ensures that they planned to lay the foundation stone on 26 January, Sarkozy's birthday.

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