Pakistan on Saturday welcomed the “reported decision” by the Denmark Government to propose a bill, which would outlaw the burning of the Holy Quran and other divine books.
“This, we believe, is a step in the right direction,” the Foreign Office said in a news release.
The FO said Pakistan had always maintained that desecration and burning of holy scriptures constituted a “serious act of religious hatred”, which must not be permitted under the guise of freedom of expression, opinion and protest.
“As stipulated by international human rights law and called for by the UN Human Rights Council, such provocative acts must be prevented and prohibited through legal means,” it said further.
The recurrent incidents of the Holy Quran’s desecration during the last few months have hurt the sentiments of over 1.6 billion Muslims worldwide.
Such abhorrent acts intend to create friction among communities and harm inter-faith harmony and mutual respect.
“It is the responsibility of national governments to take all measures necessary to prevent these acts of religious hatred, xenophobia and Islamophobia,” the foreign office maintained.
“We hope the step taken by Denmark today would culminate in effective legislation to curb the desecration of the Holy Quran and other divine books. We also hope that other countries will emulate and undertake similar steps to outlaw such hateful acts.”
In his interaction with the Danish Foreign Minister, Lars Lokke Rasmussen, Foreign Minister Jalil Abbas Jilani, while appreciating the Danish Government’s proposed legislation, expressed the hope that the bill, when passed, would create interfaith harmony and bring an end to an environment of hatred amongst people of different religious faiths.