![]() ![]() newspaper that it’s “a good message to all Muslims.” Oussama Elsaadi, an iman with a mosque in Denmark’s second-largest city Aarhus, told the B.T. The government has said there must “be room for religious criticism” and that there were no plans to reintroduce a blasphemy clause that was repealed in 2017. ![]() This year alone, activists have staged more than 500 protests, including burnings of the Quran, in front of embassies of Muslim countries, places of worship and in immigrant neighborhoods.ĭenmark has repeatedly distanced itself from the desecrations, but has insisted that freedom of expression is one of the most important values in Danish society. “A restriction of freedom of expression is wrong in a modern and enlightened society like the Danish one,” Støjberg said. Inger Støjberg of the anti-immigration Denmark Democrats said that the new law was a capitulation to Islam and a bowing down to countries that “do not share (our) set of values.” “Does Iran change its legislation because Denmark feels offended by something an Iranian could do? Does Pakistan? Does Saudi Arabia? The answer is no,” Karina Lorentzen of the Socialist People’s Party asked rhetorically. The government didn’t say anything and were called “cowards” by the opposition. The new legislation will make it a crime “to inappropriately treat, publicly or with the intention of dissemination in a wider circle, a writing with significant religious significance for a religious community or an object that appears as such.” Works of art where “a minor part” includes a desecration, but is part of a larger artistic production, isn’t covered by the ban.ĭuring the more than four-hour debate, left-leaning and far-right parties united against the center-right government, repeatedly demanding that the three-party coalition that presented the draft on Aug. The Folketing, or parliament, adopted the law in a 94-77 vote, with eight lawmakers absent. “That is why it is important that we now get better protection against the systematic desecrations we have seen for a long time.” “We must protect the security of Denmark and Danes,” Justice Minister Peter Hummelgaard said in a statement. The purpose of the law was to counter “the systematic mockery” which, among other things, has contributed to intensifying the threat of terrorism in Denmark, the justice ministry has said. The Scandinavian nation has been viewed abroad as a place that facilitates insults and denigration of the cultures, religions and traditions of other countries. Business & Finance Click to expand menu.ĬOPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) - A new law was passed in Denmark’s parliament on Thursday that makes it illegal to desecrate any holy text in the country, after a recent string of public desecrations of the Quran by a handful of anti-Islam activists sparked angry demonstrations in Muslim countries. ![]()
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