The chant should not be heard “over Danish rooftops,” Morten Bodskov has said
Denmark is considering a nationwide ban on the Islamic call to prayer. Immigration Minister Morten Bodskov has said it has “no place” in the country. The move comes amid a Danish government crackdown on “Islamization.”
Speaking to local news outlet Ritzau on Wednesday, Bodskov, a senior figure in the governing Social Democrats party, stated that the Danish authorities are set to reopen an investigation into whether the ‘Adhan’, or call to prayer, can be legally prohibited across Denmark.
“The call to prayer should not be heard over Danish rooftops,” he told Ritzau. “It has no place in Denmark, and you shouldn’t be in any doubt whether you’ve ended up in a suburb of Islamabad when you walk around Denmark.”
The Adhan is traditionally recited five times a day to summon Muslims to prayer. In some countries, it is broadcast through loudspeakers attached to mosques or minarets.
Some Danish municipalities, including Copenhagen, have already restricted outdoor broadcasts through local noise rules. However, Bodskov said “Islamization” is still taking up too much public space in Denmark, a country of around six million people with an estimated Muslim population of about 270,000 (~5% of the total population) and roughly 100 mosques.
The proposal comes as Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen begins her third consecutive term after her Social Democrats party suffered their worst election result in more than a century in March, hit by voter anger over living costs, welfare pressure, and migration.
The right-wing Danish People’s Party, meanwhile, nearly tripled its support after campaigning for zero net migration of Muslims.
Frederiksen has responded by hardening her line on Islamic visibility in public life, including calls to extend Denmark’s face-veil ban to schools and universities and remove prayer rooms from campuses.
Previously, her governments also backed stricter asylum rules, “ghetto” laws targeting areas with large migrant populations, and measures allowing authorities to relocate residents from neighborhoods deemed insufficiently integrated.
Supporters of the proposed Adhan ban say it would defend Denmark’s secular public space and prevent Islamic practices from reshaping the country’s soundscape while critics have argued that it targets one religion and could violate constitutional protections for public worship.
Europe is experiencing a broader backlash against migration and public Islamic practices, with countries like the Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, Switzerland, and Denmark recently adopting full or partial face-covering bans.
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