Amy: I'm not sure your own view of the Netherlands isn't a bit too rosy and tinted, both by the past and by the circles you move in yourself. I've got quite a few Dutch friends, and they all say the same thing - the past 10 or so years, the Netherlands have changed from the open, tolerant, beacon of enlightenment it was (well, sort of - the example all left and progressive Flemish liked to sue to show how it could be) into a more right-wing, more scared, more conservative nation. Fortuyn and Wilders wouldn't have made it in '80s Netherlands.
That aside, as far as Belgium is concerned, anyway, the situation *is* deteriorating. It goes both ways, sure, but living in Brussels, and quite close to the "black" neighbourhood (Matongé) myself I'm confronted with quite a bit of anti-Western and/or christian thinking. Mind you, you won't hear me say it's anywhere near as bad as some instances of racism that still exists, but there's a big difference: a white person saying something anti-islamic is publicly crucified as a racist and bigot; when certain people start imposing religious rules on other people, there's a huge debate over how we should accept other people's views and respect them and so on.
About the burkah: first off, Niqab and similar have *not* been banned; like t he law Charon quoted, it's a law against covering the face/head, worded so that it only applies to burkahs as far as religious apparel goes. Secondly, the brouhaha started because of teachers and public servants wearing them, which, according to sme, violated the secularism of the state.