The head of Denmark's hard-line party, Rasmuss Baloudan, closed the Facebook site after publishing a copy of a copy of the holy Koran. Facebook also said it had deleted accounts of political figures from the far right of the United States for violating the site's policy on dangerous personalities and organizations.

On April 14, the Danish party leader burned the Koran and threw it into the air in the Norbro district of Copenhagen, home to a large Muslim population, on the pretext of protesting Friday prayers in front of the parliament building, sparking protests from Muslims.

The director of communication in Facebook in Denmark - in a press statement - that everyone is equal to the rules of using the social networking site.

American Characters
In a related context, Facebook said yesterday it would delete the accounts of popular figures in the extreme right in the United States, such as journalist Alex Jones, and other figures such as Milo Janopoulos, Laura Lemer, Paul Joseph Watson.

The leader of the Web sites said he would delete the account of Paul Nellin, a white supremacist who had run for Congress in 2018, as well as the account of the leader of the Nation of Islam, Louis Farrakhan, who called for the separation of blacks from whites and called Jews like Earthlings.

Facebook has vowed to remove any accounts, pages, groups and events associated with banned individuals, either on its social network or in the instagram application, and says it prohibits any user who promotes violence or hatred.