Leaders of Muslim world slam West at UN over Quran desecrations
A protester holds the Quran during a rally in Beirut, Lebanon, Friday, July 21, 2023. (AP Photo)


Leaders of the Muslim world addressing the United Nations on Tuesday were critical of the West over the continued desecration of the Quran in the name of free speech, labeled as discriminatory.

Sweden has seen a series of burnings of the Islamic holy book, with the government voicing condemnation but saying it cannot stop acts protected under laws on free expression.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan – who has put pressure for months on Sweden over its welcome to Kurdish terrorists – said that Western countries were seeing "a plague" of racism including Islamophobia.

"It has reached intolerable levels," he told the U.N. General Assembly.

"Unfortunately, populist politicians in many countries continue to play with fire by encouraging such dangerous trends," he said.

"The mentality that encourages the hideous attacks against the holy Quran in Europe, by allowing them under the guise of freedom of expression, is essentially darkening (Europe's) own future through its own hands."

Protests in Sweden that have involved Quran burnings have been organized by refugee Salwan Momika, sparking outrage in the Middle East including his native Iraq.

Erdoğan in July said he would lift a blockade on Sweden's bid to join NATO but the Turkish parliament has not yet ratified the country's membership.

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, a cleric representing the Shiite theocratic state, held up a Quran at the U.N. rostrum.

"The fires of disrespect will not overcome the divine truth," Raisi said, accusing the West of seeking to "divert attention with the tool of freedom of speech."

"Islamophobia and cultural apartheid witnessed in Western countries – evident in actions ranging from the desecration of the holy Quran to the ban on the hijab in schools – and numerous other deplorable discriminations are not worthy of human dignity," Raisi said.

He was alluding to France, which has controversially banned Muslim girls from wearing hijabs or head coverings in schools.

His appearance comes a year after Iran cracked down on women-led protests triggered by the death in custody of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old detained by morality police for allegedly violating a strict dress code.

The emir of Qatar, the wealthy kingdom with close ties both with the West and the rest of the Islamic world, in his speech, said that "compromising the sanctity of others deliberately" should not be seen as freedom of expression.

"I would say to my Muslim brethren that it is implausible for us to get distracted by an idiot or a biased person whenever it occurs to him to provoke us by burning the holy Quran or by other forms of triviality," said Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani.

"The Quran is too holy to be desecrated by a witless person."