Summary

A Stockholm court convicted Salwan Najem of incitement against an ethnic group for his role in Qur’an burnings in 2023, sentencing him to a fine and suspended sentence.

His co-defendant, Salwan Momika, was shot dead last week, sparking concerns of foreign involvement.

The protests strained Sweden’s relations with Muslim countries and fueled debate over free speech limits.

The government had considered banning Qur’an burnings but is no longer planning immediate action. Sweden joined NATO in March 2024, partly fearing diplomatic fallout over the burnings could affect its bid.

  • @seven_phone
    link
    English
    -29 hours ago

    It is not about ownership of copies it is about respect for significance. If I print a photograph of a member of your family I will own that print, can I then deface it in front of you and will you remain passive and unaffected.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        124 minutes ago

        Who’s talking about murdering people? We’re talking about what is considered hate speech.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      18 hours ago

      But it’s not a picture of your mother (also qUaRaN forbids depictions of people) it’s a book of random bullshit made by a warlord thousand years ago. And noone defaced nothing in front of anyone their point was that muslims allowed to ignore laws and try to use some savage “laws” to punish people that disagree with them.

    • Canadian_Cabinet
      link
      fedilink
      English
      19 hours ago

      Yeah but he didn’t burn a picture of anyone’s family. He burned a fiction book written over a thousand years ago