Photographs: David Moir/Reuters
Pakistan has taken up the "despicable act" of desecration of the Quran in Florida with the United Nations, and urged it to take urgent steps to promote inter-faith harmony in the wake of increasing acts of Islamophobia.
In a letter to United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, Pakistan's Permanent Representative Ambassador Abdullah Hussain Haroon voiced his country's strong condemnation of the burning of the Islamic holy book, and expressed "profound regret and deep concern" at the growing trend of Islamophobia, intolerance and hatred towards Muslims as well as insults to their religious symbols and personalities.
...
Pakistan takes up Islamophobia with UN
Image: Controversial pastor Terry JonesPhotographs: Scott Audette/Reuters
"While this reprehensible act is the work of extremists and is evidently designed to provoke dissent and discord among communities and peoples across the world, such sacrilegious acts also go against the very concept of inter-faith harmony and threaten the multicultural fabric of the societies and the brotherhood of the United Nations," The Nation newspaper quoted Haroon's letter, as saying.
Pakistan takes up Islamophobia with UN
Image: A protest underway against the burning of the QuranPhotographs: Yusuf Ahmad/Reuters
The ambassador also urged the UN to play its important role in ensuring peace and harmony among people across the world, adding that Pakistan has full confidence in the UN leadership and hopes that it will take all steps to fight such tendencies and promote intercultural and inter-faith harmony.
Pakistan takes up Islamophobia with UN
Image: Muslims protest after Friday prayers against the West's intolerance towards IslamPhotographs: Rupak De Chowdhur/Reuters
"It does not reflect the general sentiment of respect toward Islam by the people of the United States," the embassy said in a press release.
"The deliberate destruction of a holy book is an abhorrent act," said Ambassador Cameron Munter, adding, "The US's commitment to freedom of religion and freedom of expression goes back to the founding of our nation and is enshrined in the Constitution. We absolutely reject religious intolerance in any form."
article