After many visits to Fethiye and driving/motorcycling throughout the south west region, I have never seen anyone wearing the full niqab.
On a recent (business - certainly not pleasure) visit to what is now a strongly Muslim - populated area of London, I saw two "tribes" (not sure of the collective noun) of ladies in full regalia (all had posh shoes though). Eyes only and all in black
Now, at the risk of being labelled bigot, racist or whatever it just seemed somehow "wrong" for an area in which I had formerly lived.
As Turkey seems to be moving in a less secular direction, is this to be expected to spread to the touristy south west region also?
When I said my "bigoted" ( according to Scunner) piece about my discomfort seeing replica football shirts worn in restaurants it was just my personal tastes. At a football match, fine. Not in a restaurant.
My London visit made me somewhat more uncomfortable in my surroundings.
France has stood against this - in a legal way -
A case was brought by a 24-year-old French woman, who argued that the ban on wearing the veil in public violated her freedom of religion and expression.
French law says nobody can wear in a public space clothing intended to conceal the face. The penalty for doing so can be a 150-euro fine (£120; $205).
The 2010 law came in under former conservative President Nicolas Sarkozy.
A breach of the ban can also mean a wearer having to undergo citizenship instruction.
I doubt Turkey can go this far but if Fethiye/Calis becomes this way it's goodbye to my consideration of a holiday home there.
(P.S. on a lighter note, must be a bugger for French beekeepers).