Continued reactions to the desecration of the Holy Quran; Iraqi protesters entered the Swedish embassy in Baghdad
Afghan Voice Agency (AVA): Yesterday, Thursday, June 29, the Iraqi Al-Ahd Network claimed that the embassy staff fled due to the fear of the protesters, but the official Iraqi news agency has not yet confirmed this.
The head of the Iraqi Judicial Council has issued an order to take measures related to the person who set fire to the Holy Quran in Sweden.
On the other hand, many Islamic countries, including Iran, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Jordan, strongly condemned this "anti-religious" move in response to the burning of a copy of the Holy Quran in Sweden. Islamic countries have also warned that such actions would hurt the "sentiments" of Muslims around the world.
Two weeks after Sweden's appeals court overturned a police ban on a demonstration organized to burn the Koran, the police issued a permit for a demonstration on Wednesday, which coincided with the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha, when the organizers of the demonstration carried a copy of He burned the Quran.
In recent years, some European countries, especially Sweden, have been the scene of violations and desecration of Muslim sanctities. In the shadow of the support of the Swedish police, the extreme rightists set fire to the Holy Quran, and Muslim protests have also been suppressed.