Denmark is bringing forward legislation to criminalize burning the Islamic Quran as a form of protest, after demonstrations caused Muslims to riot and angered the Islamist Turkish government.
“The government will propose legislation that prohibits the inappropriate handling of objects with essential religious significance for a religious community,” Justice Minister Peter Hummelgaard confirmed.
“The proposal will thus make it punishable to, for example, in public burn a Quran, Bible or Torah,” he added – although it is protests involving the burning of the Quran, specifically, which have been causing unrest in Denmark and especially neighboring Sweden recently.
Hummelgaard brushed off concerns that the effective reintroduction of blasphemy laws in the European Union would infringe on freedom of expression, saying: “I fundamentally believe there are more civilized ways to express one’s views than burning things.”
Many of the recent protests have been organized or inspired by Rasmus Paludan, a Danish-Swedish dual national and leader of the Stram Kurs (Hard Line) party.
Muslims responded to a Quran burning organized by Paludan over Easter 2022 in Sweden by engaging in violent riots, injuring dozens of police officers.
Several of the protests have taken place in the vicinity of Turkish embassies and consulates, infuriating the Turkish government and prompting Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdoğan to order Sweden to pass laws banning Quran burnings as a condition of approving its application for NATO.