BRUSSELS: Belgian right-wingers have offered to pay a $310 bounty to anyone who reports a veiled woman to police, they said on Tuesday, in the wake of face veil riots in Brussels.



Filip Dewinter, a senior figure within Vlaams Belang, a right-wing party, told Reuters the riots had made police apprehensive about enforcing the burqa ban and that the payment should put pressure on authorities to further enforce it.



"It's a textile prison for the women who have to live under it," he said.



It comes after protesters hurled bins and metal barriers at a Brussels police station last week after a Muslim woman was arrested for refusing to remove her face veil.



A Brussels police spokesman said he was unaware of the money being offered, but said any officer who sees a woman wearing a niqab would issue a penalty.



"When someone is breaking the law we always have to intervene, demonstrations or no, the niqab is prohibited," he said.



Women in Belgium risk a maximum fine of around $120 if they wear a full face veil in public. Belgium and France both banned the wearing of full veils in public last year.



Dewinter said he was not aware how many people had already responded to the offer of a bounty.



A spokeswoman for Belgium's federal police said the legality of the bounty was a question for the judiciary, but if someone felt insulted by it they could file a complaint with the police.



Police in Belgium are investigating last week's riots and arrested 13 members of the group Sharia4Belgium on Sunday, the police spokesman said.