Turkish asylum seeker who burned book in fear of his life: is this the Britain we want?
- Dr Chan Abraham
- 7 days ago
- 2 min read

The report by Met Police of threats against a Turkish asylum seeker who burned book outside Turkish embassy should give the UK government and political establishment serious pause for thought. Is this the nation they want the UK to be?
Are they OK with our society being degraded in this way, and for the law of the jungle to be the dominant feature of Britain in 2025?
An asylum seeker is in Britain because he protested against his government who he claims persecuted him. But now he faces threats against his life in the country granting him asylum.
The radical changes taking place in civil society are not compatible with our JudaeoChristian heritage and values.
The UK government and authorities must act swiftly in co-operation with the vast majority of the British People who want to retain our cultural identity.
Only by doing this can we be assured that the UK is not viewed as a place to import cultures and ideologies from other nations, accompanied by their #prejudices, hashtag#dogma, #bigotry and #violence.
The Free Speech Union - freespeechunion.org reports:
"At 2am this morning, police issued FSU member Hamit Coskun with an Osman warning — a formal notice of a serious and credible threat to his life, originating from a Met Police investigation.
Hamit was convicted this week under the Public Order Act for burning a copy of the Koran during a lawful protest against the rise of political Islam and authoritarianism in Turkey under President Erdoğan’s regime.
The court ruled it “disorderly” — not because of what he did, but because it provoked violence against him. Even more troublingly, the court conflated his political protest against Islam with hatred of Muslims, effectively reviving blasphemy law by the back door.
Now, ‘persons unknown’ are actively plotting to murder him.
As reported in The Telegraph, we’ve written to Met Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley demanding urgent action — including armed police protection, emergency relocation to a new safe house, and confirmation that suitably experienced Counter Terrorism Command officers are leading the investigation."
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