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A man convicted of burning Koran in front of London's Turkish Consulate

The man who burned a Koran in front of the Turkish Consulate in London on Monday was found guilty of a religiously aggravating public order offense. Critics said that the verdict effectively reinstated the abolished law of blasphemy.

Hamit Coskun was fined $325 at London's Westminster Magistrates' Court for being disorderly after he shouted "Fuck Islam!" while holding aloft a burning book in front of the consulate near central London's in February.

The lawyer for Coskun whose father is Kurdish, and his mother Armenian, and who lives in central England had argued the prosecution amounted a return of a blasphemy act that was abolished by England in 2008.

Coskun denied the charges and claimed on social media that he was protesting against the Turkish Government. He was attacked while holding the book up by a man who had a knife and spit at him.

"Burning religious books, while offensive to some, is not necessarily disorderly," stated Judge John McGarva.

The timing and place of his behavior, as well as the abusive language that accompanied it, made him a disorderly person. It was unnecessary for him to direct the "F-word" at Islam."

The National Secular Society, which paid his legal fees and echoed the Conservative Party's main opposition, called the prosecution "a significant blow" to freedom of speech.

"Britain does not have a blasphemy law." This verdict, however, creates a blasphemy law de facto," posted the party on X. "Parliament has never voted in favor of it. The British people don't want it. This decision is wrong." This decision is wrong."

(source: Reuters)