Los Angeles Times

Sweden is torn over burning of the Quran

Police get requests for similar protests. Freedom of speech is pitted against respect for different religions.

- By Karl Ritter and Jan M. Olsen Ritter and Olsen write for the Associated Press. Olsen reported from Copenhagen. AP writer Munir Ahmed in Islamabad, Pakistan, conributed to this report.

STOCKHOLM — A Quran burning and a string of requests to approve protests involving the destructio­n of more holy books have left Sweden torn between its commitment to free speech and its respect for religious minorities.

The clash of fundamenta­l principles has complicate­d Sweden’s desire to join the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on, an expansion that gained urgency after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine but needs the approval of all current members. Turkey has blocked Swedish accession since last year, citing reasons including antiTurkis­h and anti-Islamic protests in Stockholm.

Then, last week, an Iraqi Christian immigrant burned Islam’s holy book outside a Stockholm mosque during the major Muslim holiday of Eid alAdha, an act that the man said displayed his feelings about the Quran.

The burning triggered widespread condemnati­on in the Islamic world. And along with similar recent protests by a far-right activist, it sparked a debate in Sweden about the limits of freedom of speech. Now, Swedish police say they have received new requests for demonstrat­ions by individual­s who want to burn the Quran, as well as the Torah and the Bible.

Muslim countries have urged Sweden to enact bans, and Pakistan’s prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, called for a daylong protest Friday to defend the sanctity of Islam’s holy book, when Pakistan’s parliament will discuss Quran burning.

Even some liberal commentato­rs in Sweden argue that the protests should be regarded as hate speech, which is outlawed in the country when it targets ethnicity or race. But many in Sweden say that criticizin­g religion, even in a manner that is considered offensive by believers, must be allowed and that Sweden should resist pressure to reintroduc­e blasphemy laws, which were abandoned decades ago in this predominan­tly Lutheran but highly secularize­d Scandinavi­an nation.

“It is a very serious situation for Sweden,” said Magnus Ranstorp, a terrorism expert who is strategic advisor for the Center for Societal Security at the Swedish Defense University.

President Biden welcomed Prime Minister Ulf Kristersso­n to the White House on Wednesday and reiterated his belief in the importance of Sweden joining NATO.

“I want to reiterate the United States fully, fully, fully supports Sweden membership in NATO,” Biden said from the Oval Office. “The bottom line is simple: Sweden is going to make our alliance stronger.”

Stockholm police on Wednesday said they had received two applicatio­ns for book-burning protests in the capital: one from an individual who wants to burn the Quran outside a mosque and one from someone who wants to burn the Torah and the Bible outside the Israeli Embassy.

A third request that involves “setting a religious text on fire” had been filed in the southern city of Helsingbor­g, local police chief Mattias Sigfridsso­n said.

Police have not yet decided on the requests.

“In Sweden, we have the freedom of expression. We also respect people who have a different opinion and the fact that it may hurt some feelings. We have to look at the law. That is what we do,” Sigfridsso­n said.

Stockholm police tried to stop Quran-burning protests earlier this year but were overruled by a court that said such actions were protected by law.

Citing that decision, police allowed the protest last week.

Muslim leaders in Sweden deplored the incident, but the strongest reactions were in the Middle East. The Swedish Embassy in Baghdad was briefly stormed by protesters. The Organizati­on for Islamic Cooperatio­n condemned the act and criticized Swedish authoritie­s for allowing it. Iran held back on sending a new ambassador to Stockholm and Pakistan asked the U.N. Human Rights Council to schedule a special session on the issue. Outside the Muslim world, Pope Francis also lamented the incident.

Meanwhile, the Swedish government issued a statement saying it “strongly rejects the Islamophob­ic act committed by individual­s in Sweden,” adding that it “in no way reflects the opinions of the Swedish Government.”

That elicited criticism from several commentato­rs in Sweden, who said the government needs to stand up for freedom of speech and refrain from passing judgment on individual protests.

“I think it is exceptiona­l and extremely inappropri­ate for the government ... to criticize an individual demonstrat­ion carried out by a person who, by all accounts, has stayed within the bounds of the law, who has only used his constituti­onal freedom of expression,” Nils Funcke, a prominent Swedish freedom of speech advocate, told public broadcaste­r SVT.

Sweden worries that the situation is starting to resemble the fury Denmark faced from Muslim countries in 2006 after the publicatio­n of newspaper caricature­s of the prophet Muhammad. Danish consulates and embassies were burned and the cartoonist­s faced death threats from radical Islamists. Danish officials’ attempts to explain how such caricature­s were protected under freedom of speech were widely dismissed in the Muslim world.

Ranstorp said the timing of the latest Quran-burning protest, just as Swedish and Turkish officials were getting ready to hold talks about Sweden’s NATO bid this week, was suspicious.

“We have foreign powers, like Russia for example, which spread informatio­n in Arabic about this. We have Turkey, which is using it for leverage in the NATO debate,” Ranstorp said.

The Iraqi man behind the protest told Swedish media it was aimed at Islam and not Sweden’s NATO applicatio­n.

The Swedish Security Service has warned of Russian interferen­ce in Swedish society.

“In general, the Swedish Security Service sees how authoritar­ian states, like Russia, use proxies in order to destabiliz­e or influence Swedish public opinion and decision-making,” spokesman Adam Samara said.

Previously nonaligned Sweden and neighborin­g Finland rushed to apply for NATO membership after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine last year. Russia responded with warnings of “serious military-political consequenc­es” that would require “retaliator­y steps by the Russian federation.”

Finland joined NATO in April. Turkey and Hungary are the only NATO countries that have not yet ratified Sweden’s accession.

 ?? Fareed Khan Associated Press ?? CHILDREN HOLD up copies of the Quran during a demonstrat­ion in Karachi, Pakistan, against the burning of the holy book in Sweden.
Fareed Khan Associated Press CHILDREN HOLD up copies of the Quran during a demonstrat­ion in Karachi, Pakistan, against the burning of the holy book in Sweden.

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