Labour Member of Parliament (MP) Tahir Ali has urged the British government to ban the “desecration” of religious texts and prophets. During a parliamentary session, Ali addressed Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, calling for the reinstatement of laws to restrict such acts, which the British officially discarded in 2008 and 2021, long after they had fallen into disuse.
Representing the Birmingham Hall Green and Moseley constituency (electoral district), Ali complained that such desecration fuels societal “hatred.” He referred to a United Nations Human Rights Council resolution that condemned the desecration of religious texts like the Islamic Quran.
Ali’s proposal comes during Islamophobia Awareness Month amidst increasing calls across Europe for more special protections for Muslims.
Prime Minister Starmer expressed agreement with Ali’s concerns, stating that desecration is concerning and should be uniformly deplored and declining to rule out a blasphemy law altogether. Labour, experienced electoral challenges in constituencies with significant Muslim populations in the July snap election that returned them to power for the first time since 2010, with competition from pro-Palestine candidates biting into their vote.
Denmark, after removing its longstanding blasphemy law in 2017, already reinstated legislation in 2023 outlawing the desecration of holy texts following several controversial Quran-burning protests. Danish officials argued the move was necessary for national security, citing increased terrorism threats.
Practically speaking, anti-Islam blasphemy is already de facto criminalized in the United Kingdom, with broad public order laws and laws allowing for “grossly offensive” posts over communications networks, including social media, allowing for arrests.
WATCH:
A Labour MP calls for a law to ban criticism of prophets.
Starmer does not rule it out
The answer was simple: Blasphemy laws have no place in the UK.pic.twitter.com/FKNU8jKvch
— Robert Jenrick (@RobertJenrick) November 27, 2024