From this overall figure, in 189 cases the extremist motive could not be confirmed. 78 further cases represented discrimination or hate speech crimes and were therefore not included in the breakdown below, bringing the final figure of hate crimes reported in 2011 to 102.
Official figures record 70 hate crimes motivated by racism and xenophobia. Of these, one was homicide, five were assaults, 12 cases of damage to property, 12 threats, and 40 other unspecified crimes.
Official figures record 24 crimes motivated by anti-religious bias. Of these, two were assaults, two threats, and 20 other unspecified crimes.
Official figures record 23 crimes motivated by bias on the basis of sexual orientation. Of these, 12 were physical assaults, one case of damage to property, four cases of threats or threatening behaviour, and six other unspecified cases.
Submitted data was not disaggregated by faith.
The UN Human Rights Council, in its Universal Periodic Review, encouraged Denmark to take measures to protect vulnerable groups from hate crimes, noting the launch of an awareness-raising campaign to increase reporting of hate crimes.