Connect with us

Agnes Isika Blog

Muslim Nations Condemn Sweden’s Burning Of The Qur’an

Latest News

Muslim Nations Condemn Sweden’s Burning Of The Qur’an

The burning of the Qur’an by an Iraqi resident in Sweden was denounced on Thursday by Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and other Middle Eastern countries, who further warned that such actions “inflame” the sentiments of Muslims worldwide.

Salwan Momika, a 37-year-old man who emigrated to Sweden several years ago, set fire to numerous pages of the Qur’an in front of Stockholm’s largest mosque on Wednesday while being heavily guarded by police.

In accordance with free speech rights, police in the Swedish capital had given him permission for the demonstration; nonetheless, they later announced that they had started an inquiry against the man for “agitation.”

As Muslims around the world began celebrating Eid al-Adha, and as the annual hajj trip to Mecca in Saudi Arabia was drawing near, the incident took place.

“These events inflame the feelings of Muslims around the world and represent a dangerous provocation for them,” the foreign ministry in Baghdad said.

Iraq’s influential Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr called for a demonstration outside the Swedish embassy in Baghdad to demand the removal of the ambassador, charging that his state is “hostile to Islam”.

Iran joined in the condemnation, calling the Qur’an burning “provocative, ill-considered and unacceptable”.

“The government and people of the Islamic Republic of Iran… do not tolerate such an insult and strongly condemn it,” said foreign ministry spokesperson Nasser Kanani.

“The Swedish government is expected to seriously consider the principle of responsibility and accountability in this regard while preventing the repetition of insulting the holy sanctities,” he added.

Saudi Arabia, which hosted around 1.8 million Muslim pilgrims for the hajj that ended on Wednesday, also denounced the Qur’an burning. These hateful and repeated acts cannot be accepted with any justification,” the Saudi foreign ministry said.

Egypt, the Arab world’s most populous country, called the Qur’an burning a “disgraceful act provoking the feelings of Muslims” as they mark Eid.

The Cairo-based Arab League branded the Qur’an burning an “assault on the core of our Islamic faith”.

Kuwait called for perpetrators of such “hostile acts” to be brought to justice and “prevented from using the principle of freedoms as a ploy to justify hostility against Islam or any holy faith”.

The Qur’an burning was also condemned by the six-member Gulf Cooperation Council and by Morocco, which recalled its ambassador to Stockholm.

“This new offensive and irresponsible act disregards the feelings of more than a billion Muslims, at this sacred time of the great pilgrimage to Mecca and the blessed feast of Eid al-Adha,” the kingdom said.

“Faced with these repeated provocations, committed under the complacent gaze of the Swedish government”, Morocco summoned Sweden’s charge d’affaires in Rabat and recalled its ambassador, it added.

Syria’s government condemned the “disgraceful act” on one of the holiest days for Muslims “by an extremist with the permission and consent of the Swedish government”.

Lebanon’s powerful Iran-backed movement Hezbollah charged the Swedish authorities were “complicit in the crime”.

Hezbollah called on Sweden to put an end to such acts “rather than hiding behind freedom of speech”.

It urged religious authorities and Muslim and Arab nations to take “all the necessary steps” to compel Sweden and other countries to prevent the recurrence of such incidents and stop “the spread of a culture of hate”.

The Palestinian foreign ministry condemned what it said was a “flagrant attack on human rights, values of tolerance, acceptance of others, democracy and peaceful coexistence among followers of all religions”.

Further afield, Afghanistan’s Taliban government, which enforces a strict interpretation of the Qur’an and Islamic law, also reacted angrily, labeling the Qur’an burning an act of “utter contempt towards this noble religion”.

In January, a Swedish-Danish right-wing extremist burned a copy of the Qur’an near the Turkish embassy in Stockholm, also triggering outrage in the Muslim world.

Continue Reading
You may also like...
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

More in Latest News

TrueTalk with Agnes

Today's Quote

A focused mind is one of the most powerful forces in the universe

Trending

Contributors

LAGOS WEATHER
To Top