IQNA

Rising Islamophobia: Estonian Politician Calls for Banning Quran in Public Places

7:59 - April 04, 2016
News ID: 3459449
TEHRAN (IQNA) – As Islamophobia is growing in many countries in North America and Europe, an Estonian politician has come up with a proposal to ban the Quran in public places, saying that it would be good for Estonia’s safety.



Banning Islam’s Holy Book was proposed by Kristiina Ojuland, head of the People's Unity Party (PUP), Estonian media reported.

"Today, the negative and criminal side of Islam is so strong that we believe this move is a necessary measure to provide safety for our country and our nation, especially our women and children,” Ojuland, who served as Estonia’s foreign minister from 2002 to 2005, told the Estonian BNS news agency.

The party’s leadership said it is concerned over the growing number of refugees arriving in the EU and in particular in Estonia.

"We decided to start gathering information from the population on cases of abuse and harassment, which is hushed in the mainstream media," Triin Raidmets, the leader of the PUP branch in Pärnu, said, RT reported.

In February, the Soldiers of Odin, an international anti-immigrant group, held a meeting in Estonia. Its members said they were planning to conduct regular street patrols to keep a close eye on refugees.

According to open data on Facebook, there are more than 8,600 members of Soldiers of Odin in Estonia.

When the group opened a subsidiary office in Tallinn, they announced the preconditions for those wanting to join the organization: potential recruits must be over 18, and neither be Muslim nor an "all talk couch warrior.”

Some of them, the Eesti Päevaleht newspaper reports, are high-ranking military officials and members of the Kaitseliit (Defense Union), Estonia’s volunteer paramilitary unit and an integral part of the national military.

In March, seven asylum seekers from Iraq, Yemen and Syria arrived in Estonia as a part of the EU's relocation plan. They were housed in the Estonian capital, Tallinn, and the city of Tartu and got one-year residence permits.

All in all the Baltic country is expected to host 523 refugees in 2016. Its neighbors Latvia and Lithuania are to accept 776 and 1,105 asylum seekers respectively.

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