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UK Man Convicted for Quran Desecration in Controversial Ruling

ISLAMABAD:ย A British court has convicted a man for burning the Holy Quran outside Londonโ€™s Turkish consulate in a case critics warn revives blasphemy laws through legal backdoor.

Hamit Coskun, 50, was fined ยฃ240 ($325) for a “religiously aggravated” public order offense after his February protest, where he shouted expletives while setting the Islamic scripture ablaze.

Court Rules Protest “Provocative and Hate-Motivated”

Judge John McGarva emphasized the verdict wasnโ€™t about blasphemy but disorderly conduct, citing Coskunโ€™s abusive language and deliberate provocation near a Muslim diplomatic mission.

“Your actions were motivated by hatred of Islamโ€™s followers,” the judge stated.

The prosecution denied targeting free speech, insisting the charge stemmed from public disruption.

Free Speech Backlash

The National Secular Society and UK Conservatives condemned the ruling as a de facto blasphemy law, abolished in England in 2008.

Coskunโ€™s lawyer argued the case criminalized anti-government protestโ€”he claimed his Kurdish-Armenian heritage fueled his stance against Ankara.

During the incident, a passerby attacked Coskun with a knife, highlighting tensions around religious sensitivities in multicultural Britain.

The verdict sparks fresh debate: Can Western democracies balance free expression with preventing religious hatred? As secular groups vow appeals, the case sets a precedent that may chill dissent under the guise of public order.

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