Putin comments on Quran-burning in Sweden

It is a crime to deliberately offend religious beliefs, the Russian leader said

Russian President Vladimir Putin has condemned the Quran-burning, promising to protect Muslims from hate.  

“[The Quran] is holy to Muslims,” Putin said during his trip to Russia’s Muslim-majority region of Dagestan on Wednesday. “We know that in other countries they act differently, they don’t respect the religious sentiments of people, and say that it is not a crime [to attack one’s religious beliefs].”

Putin noted that deliberately offending and mocking religious beliefs falls under Article 282 of the Russian Criminal Code, which deals with incitement to hatred.

“It is a crime to incite religious hate,” the Russian leader said. “We will always abide by these legal rules.” 

The burning of the Quran in countries such as Sweden and Norway has led to protests by Muslims at home and abroad. The authorities in these states usually condemn the acts themselves, but argue that they are protected under freedom of expression laws.

There have been several cases of activists publicly tearing pages out of the Quran and setting the book on fire, most notably in Nordic countries. On Wednesday, a Swedish court allowed the Quran to be burned outside of a mosque in Stockholm on Eid al-Adha, a major Muslim holiday. 

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