Sweden cannot join Nato if Koran burning is allowed, says Turkey’s Erdogan
- ‘Sweden, don’t even bother! As long as you allow my holy book to be burned and torn … we will not say yes’, the president said
- Sweden, Finland applied to join Nato after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine; all Nato members except Turkey, Hungary have ratified their accession, but unanimity required

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan reaffirmed on Wednesday that Turkey will not allow Sweden to join the Nato military alliance as long as the Scandinavian nation permits protests desecrating Islam’s holy book to take place.
Turkey, which has been delaying approving Sweden and Finland’s membership to the Western alliance, has been infuriated by a series of demonstrations in Stockholm by activists who have burned the Koran outside the Turkish Embassy and hanged an effigy of Erdogan. It has indefinitely postponed a key meeting in Brussels that would have discussed the two Nordic countries’ entry into Nato.
“Sweden, don’t even bother! As long as you allow my holy book, the Koran, to be burned and torn, and you do so together with your security forces, we will not say ‘yes’ to your entry into Nato,” Erdogan said in a speech to his ruling party’s legislators.
Swedish government officials have distanced themselves from the protests, including by a far-right anti-Islam activist who burned copies of the Koran in Stockholm and in Copenhagen, Denmark, while also stressing that the demonstrations are protected by freedom of speech.
On Tuesday, Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson denounced the activists who carried out the demonstrations as “useful idiots” for foreign powers who want to inflict harm on the Scandinavian country as it seeks to join Nato.
“We have seen how foreign actors, even state actors, have used these manifestations to inflame the situation in a way that is directly harmful to Swedish security,” Kristersson told reporters in Stockholm, without naming any countries.