Much more of this is to come, all over Europe
It’s a story that one might expect to come out of Tehran or Lahore. Instead, it comes from Lyon, France. The French-language CNews reported that “a man was sentenced this Wednesday by the Lyon Criminal Court to one year in prison for burning a Quran in front of a mosque in Villeurbanne (Rhône) last June.”
This had been a long time in the offing, and now it’s happening with increasing frequency. For years, Western governments refrained from crossing the line and levying criminal charges against someone for violating Islamic blasphemy laws. Then in Britain in June, a Turkish dissident, Hamit Coskun, was fined for burning a Qur’an. And now this.
CNews explained that the sentence also included “a two-year ban on appearing in the same city,” that is, Villeurbanne, where the unnamed perpetrator carried out his heinous crime of registering his disapproval of the violence, exploitation, subjugation, hatred and more that the Qur’an sanctions. He was put on trial for “degradation committed on the grounds of race, ethnicity, nation, or religion,” but he insisted that he was not, despite appearances to the contrary, “an Islamophobe.” He said instead that he was simply, and tragically, a “victim of his illness,” as he has been receiving treatment as a paranoid schizophrenic for nine years.