Iran has halted “administrative phases” to dispatch an ambassador to Sweden over the government-sanction desecration of the holy Qur’an in the European nation, Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian declared.
“Despite the conclusion of administrative phases, the procedures of dispatching an ambassador to Sweden has been halted for the time-being due to its government’s sanctioning of desecration of the holy Qur’an,” the top diplomat declared Wednesday in a Twitter post.
He further noted that he had held detailed discussion with Iran’s new envoy to Sweden, Hojatollah Faghani, on the latest events in the Scandinavian country.
روز گذشته با همکارم آقای حجتالله فغانی، سفیر جدید کشورمان در سوئد،به تفصیل صحبت کردیم و ایشان نیز گزارشی از آخرین وضعیت حوزه مأموریت خود ارائه کردند.
— H.Amirabdollahian امیرعبداللهیان (@Amirabdolahian) July 2, 2023
علیرغم پایان مراحل اداری،فعلا روند اعزام سفیر به سوئد به علت اقدام دولت این کشور در صدور مجوز جسارت به ساحت قرآنکریم متوقف شد.
Prior to Amir-Abdollahian's statement, an informed source in Tehran's foreign ministry was cited in an IRNA report as saying that Iran does not intend to dispatch a new ambassador to Sweden over the state-sanctioned, anti-Islam action.
The source made the remarks on Sunday, four days after an Iraqi citizen residing in Sweden stomped on Islam’s holy book and set several pages alight outside Stockholm's central mosque with heavy police presence that constituted a deliberate government-approved demonstration to insult Muslims and Islamic sanctities.
The blasphemous act had been authorized by the Swedish police under the pretext of free-speech laws.
The sacrilegious Qur’an burning, which coincided with the start of the Muslim Eid al-Adha (Feast of Sacrifice) at the end of the annual Hajj pilgrimage, sparked a wave of anger and condemnations across the Muslim world.
On Thursday, Iran's Foreign Ministry summoned Sweden's chargé d'affaires in the capital Tehran.
During the session, the ministry's director-general for Western Europe told the Swedish envoy that the act of insult served as an instance of hatemongering and inclination towards aggression that had been excused through the abuse of the principle of free speech.
Stockholm's silence had emboldened those who have violated one of the fundamental and obvious principles of human rights, namely the principle of respect for religious and divine values, the Iranian official added.
Back in January, a Swedish-Danish right-wing extremist burned a copy of the Qur’an near the Turkish embassy in Stockholm, also triggering outrage in the Muslim countries.