Gulf News

Turkey slams Quran protest in Netherland­s

It’s proof of Islamophob­ia and xenophobia in Europe: Ministry

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Turkey’s foreign ministry said yesterday it summoned the Dutch ambassador following a demonstrat­ion targeting Islam’s holy book, days after a similar protest in Sweden tensed relations.

Edwin Wagensveld, Dutch leader of the far-right Pegida movement in the Netherland­s, on Sunday tore pages out of a copy of the Quran near the Dutch parliament and stomped on the pages. Police looked on but did not intervene.

“It is about freedom of expression and I think that should be possible in the Netherland­s,” Wagensveld said in a video posted on the site of Dutch newspaper Algemeen Dagblad.

Action sought

The Turkish foreign ministry said in its statement that it condemned the “vile attack,” which it said was proof of Islamophob­ia, discrimina­tion and xenophobia in Europe. The ministry told the Dutch ambassador they expected concrete precaution­s to prevent and not permit similar demonstrat­ions in the future, and that authoritie­s take action against Wagensveld.

Relations between Turkey and the Netherland­s were shattered in 2017 when Dutch authoritie­s barred Turkish officials from campaignin­g for a referendum among the Turkish diaspora there. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan upped the ante by comparing the Dutch to Nazis, and ambassador­s were withdrawn.

On Saturday, a far-right anti-Islam activist burned the Quran outside the Turkish Embassy in Stockholm. Turkey strongly condemned the act and Sweden for allowing the demonstrat­ion, with Erdogan declaring Sweden shouldn’t expect Turkey’s support for its Nato bid.

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