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EXPLAINER: Can Denmark make it illegal to burn holy texts?

Denmark scrapped its anti-blasphemy law in 2017 and has traditionally held that insulting religions is permissible because the constitution guarantees freedom of speech. How can the government make it illegal to burn the Quran, and what considerations are there for politicians?

EXPLAINER: Can Denmark make it illegal to burn holy texts?
Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen (centre) is questioned by media, as the Danish government briefs on plans that could restrict demonstrations that involve burning religious texts like the Quran. Photo: Mads Claus Rasmussen/Ritzau Scanpix

The Danish government said on Sunday evening it would explore legal means of stopping protests involving the burning of holy texts in certain circumstances.

In a statement, the government cited security concerns following backlash over recent incidents that saw the Quran desecrated in Denmark and Sweden.

Noting that such protests played into the hands of extremists, the government wants to “explore” intervening in situations where “other countries, cultures, and religions are being insulted, and where this could have significant negative consequences for Denmark, not least with regard to security,” it said in a statement from the foreign ministry.

Conservative parties already raised concern about the potential move. Conservative Party leader Søren Pape Poulsen told broadcaster DR “we are compromising on things that I’m concerned about where they’ll end”.

Quran-burning demonstrations in Denmark have taken place since 2019, initiated by right-wing extremist Rasmus Paludan and his political party Stram Kurs.

Burning the Quran, and insulting religion in general, is permitted in Denmark under the country’s constitutional free speech rights.

“Since Denmark does not have a blasphemy law it gives the possibility for people to come up with radical points of views,” Helle Lykke Nielsen, Associate Professor of Contemporary Middle East Studies at the University of Southern Denmark, previously told The Local. 

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According to legal experts commenting on Monday, it would be relatively simple for parliament to introduce laws that criminalise burning the Quran and other holy texts.

But opinion is divided on whether this could be a first step towards seeing the country’s free speech traditions begin to backslide.

“This would in my view be a limited and therefore a legal intervention,” Sten Schaumburg-Müller, a law professor at the University of Southern Denmark, told news wire Ritzau.

In other words, such an intervention would impinge on free speech rights as they stand but would be legal, according to the professor.

New legislation as suggested by the government would apply to all religious texts and not just the Quram, Schaumburg-Müller noted. It would have a narrow definition and state practical purposes such as preventing safety risks and disturbances, he said.

Another law expert however said that a legal mechanism aimed at stopping Quran burnings is not a straightforward step.

“Criticising a religion is completely legal. We scrapped the blasphemy paragraph in Denmark in 2017,” Jens Elo Rytter, professor of administrative law at the University of Copenhagen, told Ritzau.

“The blasphemy paragraph was controversial for a long time and that was what led to it being repealed,” he said.

Conservative politicians including the leader of the Liberal Alliance party, Alex Vanopslagh, have expressed concern about a “slippery slope” in which a precedent is set for interventions in free speech.

Rytter said he understood that argument.

“If we begin – as is the case here – to say that free speech can be limited as a consideration to broader Danish diplomatic, trade and security interests abroad, I can envisage other problematic interventions will come,” he said.

“For example if you suddenly aren’t allowed to burn pictures of foreign leaders or have demonstrations where you criticise others,” he said.

But that view was not shared entirely by Schaumburg-Müller, who noted that he supported the repeal of the blasphemy law at the time because of its broad protection of religious sensitivities.

“It was because it had this broad formulation. But introducing a very limited thing here, which says you can’t burn Qurans – I don’t see that necessarily leading anywhere,” he said.

Professor emeritus in criminal law Jørn Vestergaard, also of the University of Copenhagen, noted that free speech does not cover every kind of statement or expression.

“This is precisely why the criminal code contains rules on defamation, racist statements, breach of confidentiality, lèse-majesté, support for terrorism, preaching by imams, a ban on masks, child pornography, desecration of graves and much more,” Vestergaard told Ritzau in a written comment.

As such, Vestergaard said he found it hard to argue that burning holy scriptures is a higher priority for protection than public order, security and protecting religious minorities.

“The criminal code contains a provision on publicly insulting a foreign state’s flag or other national emblem,” he said.

“You could choose to introduce a similar ban against insulting a recognised religious community by publicly degrading specially significant religious objects,” he said.

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POLITICS

EXPLAINED: How AI deep fakes are bringing new tensions to Danish politics

Denmark's culture minister said on Monday he hoped to use copyright law to bring an end to the controversial new trend of using deep fake videos in politics. Here's the background.

EXPLAINED: How AI deep fakes are bringing new tensions to Danish politics

Jakob Engel-Schmidt, who represents the Moderate Party, warned that the technique, used in recent videos by the far-right Danish People’s Party and libertarian Liberal Alliance were the “top level of  a slippery slope that could end up undermining our trust in one another and making every political message, newspaper article and artistic publication a potential battleground for whether it is true or false”. 

Which parties have used deepfake video in campaigning? 

The Danish People’s Party at the end of last month issued an AI-generated deepfake video showing a spoof speech in which Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen appeared to announce that Ascension Day, Easter and Christmas would no longer be public holidays, and that they would all be replaced by the Muslim festival of Eid as the country’s only holiday. 

This was a satirical reference to the government’s unpopular decision to abolish Store bededag, or “Great Prayer Day” as a public holiday. 

The video was clearly labelled as AI-generated, and ends with the Danish People’s Party’s leader, Morten Messeschmidt, awakening from a nightmare. 

The Liberal Alliance also released a video for Great Prayer Day, in which it used AI to turn Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen (S), Defense Minister Troels Lund Poulsen (V) and Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen (M) into eccentric-looking characters similar to those in the film’s of the US director Wes Anderson.

What kind of a stir have the videos caused in Denmark? 

Denmark’s Minister for Digitization, Marie Bjerre, who represents the centre-right Liberal Party, was sharply critical of the Danish People’s Party’s move. 

“I think it is way over the line for the Danish People’s Party to make a deepfake of a political opponent. I don’t think it’s proper either, and they shouldn’t do it,” she said. “It is also a problem for our democracy and society. Because with deepfakes, you can create material that looks extremely credible, which means that you can really spread misinformation. That is why it is also very serious that the Danish People’s Party is using deepfake for this kind of thing.” 

She said that such videos should only be allowed if the organisation making or distributing them have received consent from the person depicted. 

“If you want to make deepfakes of people, you must ask for permission. That will be the proper way to do it,” she said. 

Messerschmidt defended the video as light-hearted satire that at the same time educated Danish people about the new technology. 

“What we can do is show Danes how to use the new technologies and how to use them in a good way, like here in an entertaining and satirical way,” he said. 

Although Engel-Schmidt said he was concerned about the use of deepfake videos in politics, he acknowledged that the light-hearted videos released by the two parties were in themselves unlikely to deceive anyone.  

How does Engel-Schmidt hope to regulate such deepfake videos? 

He said he aimed to see whether copyright law could be used to regulate such videos.

Presumably this would mean seeing whether, under law, people have a right to the use of the own image, personality or voice, and can therefore forbid them from being used without permission. 

What do the experts say? 

Christiane Vejlø, one of Denmark’s leading experts on the relationship between people and technology, welcomed the government’s moves towards regulating deepfake videos, pointing to the impact they were already having on politics in other countries such as India and the US.

“There is no doubt that we will have to deal with this phenomenon. It has an impact on something that is most important to us in a democracy – namely trust and faith in other people,” she told Denmark’s public broadcaster DR.

In the current Indian election campaign, she said that deepfakes of popular Bollywood actors had been used to criticise the current government and encourage voters to vote for the opposition.

“In India and the USA we see politicians saying things they could never think of saying. We are getting an erosion of the truth,” she said. 

She said that even if the videos were clearly labelled as AI-generated, it did not necessarily make them unproblematic. 

“Even if you can see that it is a deepfake, it can still influence voters to think that there is something wrong with them [the politician] or that they look stupid,” she said. “We have a situation where another person is used as a digital hand puppet.” 

 
 

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