It's irrelevant because it would only be about establishing a case against absolute free speech, since I don't believe in absolute free speech, it's too specific to deal with the case of specially privileging a set of specific religious texts.
The issue in both situations seems to be related to doing offensive acts that are publicised so I don't think it's irrelevant.
In the UNCHR resolution, they condemned a public burning of a Quran. Since Ali referenced the UNCHR resolution and spoke about fuelling hatred and division in society, it sounds like he is narrowing the criminality to an act that is intended to fuel hatred and division in society. The UNCHR narrowed it further to desecrating texts that could be
incitement to discrimination, hostility or violence.
If someone burns a Quran in their house - obviously I can't be sure but I don't think the law being proposed by Ali would make that an offence. I think that would be stupid to criminalise burning a book in your own house. It's just a book.
Burning a model of the Grenfell Towers might be considered offensive if people found out about it later, even if you did not publicise it, because people died in that fire. But the criminality came from filming and distributing it as that affects society.
The 'blanket condemnation' is that Starmer doesn't think contextualise his answer in terms of the govts opposition so he accepts the premise from Ali that 'desecration' is bad. The problem with Ali and the UNHRC approach is that I can't see any way of an intentional act of 'desecration' being defined as not intended to cause offence because the decision is based on the offence taken.
Agreed that the subjective nature, as with hate speech, is problematic.
Is the intent of desecration to have people feel bad because you are disrespecting what they care about?
Is the person desecrating something simply making a statement that they do not respect something?
Or do they actively want other people to feel upset that what they care about is being desecrated?
Either way, the government can say an act is bad without seeking to criminalise it.
Do you think what Ali proposes should be made law?
No.