(MENAFN- Trend News Agency) President Recep Tayyip Erdogan reiterated Türkiye's concerns
about the rise of anti-Muslim hatred in the West, as he urged
countries to take action against hate crimes, trend reports citing daily sabah .
Speaking at an iftar gathering, a dinner to mark the breaking of
the daily fast, with ambassadors in the capital Ankara, Erdogan
said the European Union continues to be Türkiye's strategic
partner, but Ankara has concerns about the rise of anti-Muslim
sentiment and lack of concrete action by relevant authorities.
"The attacks on the Quran are a hate crime. Quran burning acts
cannot be authorized under the scope of freedom of expression," the
president said, adding that such shameful acts do not only anger 2
billion Muslims, but also angers them and it is about time to stop
them.
Earlier on Tuesday a Swedish court overturned a police decision
to ban two Quran-burning protests, despite global condemnation over
prior incidents.
The burning of Islam's holy book outside Türkiye's embassy in
Stockholm in January angered the Muslim world, sparking weeks of
protests and calls for a boycott of Swedish goods, and holding up
Sweden's NATO membership bid.
Sweden's Supreme Administrative Court overturned a police
decision to ban two subsequent Quran-burning protests in February,
saying security risk concerns were not enough to limit the right to
demonstrate.
The "police authority did not have sufficient support for its
decisions," said Judge Eva-Lotta Hedin in a statement.
Swedish police had refused to authorize the Quran burnings
outside the Turkish and Iraqi embassies in Stockholm in February
saying that the January protest had made Sweden "a higher priority
target for attacks."
Türkiye took particular offense that the police had authorized
the demonstration. Ankara has blocked Sweden's NATO bid because
Stockholm failed to crack down on the PKK terrorist group and its
members in the country.
The order that confines the fate of humanity to the say of five
countries "is not sustainable", said the Turkish president on
Tuesday, urging for an "inclusive and encompassing" reform to the
U.N. Security Council.
"The current order, which traps the fate of humanity between the
lips of 5 countries, is not sustainable. There is an urgent need
for the UNSC to be reformed with an inclusive and encompassing
understanding," Erdogan said.
He said Türkiye is now "harvesting the gains" of its
entrepreneurial and humanitarian foreign policy, with several
countries rushing to extend help to Türkiye after the Feb. 6
earthquakes in country's south.
Regarding Russia's war on Ukraine, Erdoğan voiced belief in the
possibility "to maintain a fair peace that will allow both sides to
get an honorable exit, and that will take our region out of the
maelstrom it has been dragged into."
Türkiye is aware of the "word games, diplomatic, and military
cunnings" of terror groups, Erdogan said, and affirmed that his
country is closely following them.
"Just as we do not consent to our country being surrounded by a
terror corridor, we will certainly not allow further attempts," he
added.
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