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FM Bilawal condemns Quran desecration as ‘attack on faith’ at UN rights council

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Pakistan’s foreign minister on Tuesday said that the desecration of the Holy Quran amounted to the incitement of religious hatred as the UN Human Rights Council debated a motion in the wake of the desecration of the Muslim holy book in Sweden last month.

“The Holy Quran is a spiritual anchor for two billion Muslims. It is inseparable from their sense of identity and dignity,” Foreign Minister BIlawal Bhutto-Zardari told a session of the UN Human Rights Council hosting the debate on ‘public acts of incitement to religious hatred in European and other countries’.

“We must see this clearly for what it is: incitement to religious hatred, discrimination and attempts to provoke violence,” Bilawal told the council via video link, saying such acts had occurred under “government sanction and with the sense of impunity”.

“It is important to understand the deep hurt that a public and premeditated act of the Holy Quran’s desecration causes to Muslims. It is an attack on their faith,” he added.

His remarks were echoed by Saudi Arabia’s Foreign Minister, Prince Faisal bin Farhan, who also condemned the Sweden incident.

The motion, brought by Pakistan in response to the incident in Sweden, seeks a report from the UN rights chief on the topic and calls on states to review their laws and plug gaps that may “impede the prevention and prosecution of acts and advocacy of religious hatred”.

It has highlighted rifts in the UN body between the West and a Muslim grouping, with western members concerned about its implications for free speech.

UN Human Rights Chief Volker Turk told the 47-member council that inflammatory acts against Muslims, as well as other religions or minorities, are “offensive, irresponsible and wrong”.

But, he continued, these were “complex areas” and care needs to be taken in setting legal limits on free speech, which could be abused by those in power.

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