Man to stand trial for assault of 2 Muslim women wearing hijab
Two women wearing the hijab in front of Sciencepo, Paris University, Paris, France, April 21, 2016. (Sabah File Photo)


A man in his 60s who assaulted two Muslim women wearing headscarves is set to stand trial in France, according to the women's attorney.

Lawyer Nabil Boudi said on Twitter Friday that the suspect will face charges at the Montpellier Criminal Court on Sept. 14.

The alleged assailant will face charges in court for temporarily preventing the two women from working, using deliberate violence to target their beliefs and humiliating them.

The man who allegedly attacked the women on March 12 in the southern city of Montpellier surrendered to police the next day, and soon after the prosecutor's office launched an investigation.

Images circulating on social media show a man trying to forcefully seize the phone from a young woman while another hijab-wearing woman tries to pull them apart.

The suspect rants in another posted video of the incident, "Really the most ridiculous religion in the world."

This is not the first time Muslim women in France have been subjected to Islamophobic attacks, in a country with a rapidly increasing rate of anti-Muslim hate and attacks.

A video of a man and a woman hitting two Jordanian siblings went viral on social media in 2020. The video prompted an uproar among social media users, who decried the country's rising racism, xenophobia and Islamophobia.

In France, the Muslim community represents 8% of the population, or around 6 million people, out of a total population of over 65 million.