Hadi Mizban/AP
Protesters set fire to a copy of the Quran outside the Iraqi Embassy in Denmark’s capital of Copenhagen on Monday, drawing condemnation from Iraq and other Muslim-majority countries.
It was the second time in just a few days protesters from an ultranationalist group called Danish Patriots burned the Quran, following similar acts by different groups in neighboring Sweden.
The acts have set off public protests in Iraq, Iran, Lebanon, Pakistan and elsewhere.
Swedish and Danish officials have condemned the desecration of the Quran but allowed such actions to go forward under the countries’ freedom of expression and right to protest laws.
On Monday, the Iraqi government called on European countries to “reconsider” those laws.
Protests in Iraq
The day after the Quran burning Friday in Copenhagen, hundreds of protesters in Iraq tried to storm Baghdad’s Green Zone, a heavily guarded area that houses foreign embassies and Iraqi government buildings. In the Iraqi city of Basra, demonstrators attacked facilities of the Danish Refugee Council, an aid group.
Protesters previously attacked the Swedish Embassy in Baghdad over anti-Islam demonstrations that took place in Sweden’s capital, Stockholm. Iraq’s government expelled the Swedish ambassador and pulled the Iraqi chargé d’affaires out of Stockholm over the Scandinavian country’s failure to stop the desecration of the Muslim holy book.
Ruth Sherlock reported from Beirut; Esme Nicholson reported from Berlin. Alex Leff contributed to this story from Washington, D.C.
This story originally appeared on NPR