Police issue permit for Stockholm Quran burning protest
Swedish police said Wednesday they had granted a permit for a protest outside the Iraqi embassy in Stockholm, with media reporting the organizers planned to burn the Muslim holy book.
Stockholm police told AFP they had granted a permit for a “public gathering” outside the Iraqi embassy, but did not wish to give further comments on what the protesters were planning.
According to news agency TT, the organizers had written in their application that the protesters wanted to burn the Quran and the Iraqi flag, and told the news agency that the same two people who participated in the June protest would be staging the new one.
AFP has requested a copy of the application from police, but did not immediately get a response.
Swedish police have stressed that they only grant permits for people to hold public gatherings and not for the activities conducted during them.
In June, Swedish police had granted a permit for 37-year-old Salwan Momika’s protest where he stomped on the Quran and set several pages alight in front of Stockholm’s largest mosque during Eid al-Adha, a festival celebrated by Muslims around the world.
The permit was granted in line with free speech protections, but authorities later said they had opened an investigation over “agitation against an ethnic group”, noting that Momika had burnt pages from the Islamic holy book very close to the mosque.
The two events triggered a series of condemnations in the Muslim world.
Swedish police had originally blocked Momika’s protest, citing security concerns raised after the January burning.
But the decision was appealed and subsequently overturned by two courts which found that the security concerns cited did not have a clear enough connection to the planned event or its immediate vicinity.