SHARE
COPY LINK

VILKS

Vilks arsonists plan to appeal prison sentences

The two brothers who last week were sentenced for firebombing the home of artist Lars Vilks will appeal the sentence, the younger brother's lawyer announced on Monday.

Vilks arsonists plan to appeal prison sentences
Photo: Björn Lindgren/Scanpix (file)

“We believe that the district court made a wrong decision,” Lennart Nilsson told news agency TT. “My client does not at all think that his explanation of the course of events is so improbable as the district court believes and accordingly wants to have a trial in the court of appeal.”

The news agency did not give the brothers’ names, but the tabloid Expressen has previously identified them as Mensur, 19 and Mentor Alija, 21. They are both Swedish nationals of Kosovar origin.

The deadline for an appeal is August 5th. Mentor Alija’s lawyer, Johan Sederholm, confirmed that he will also lodge an appeal on Monday. Deputy chief prosecutor Göran Olsson has not yet decided if he will also appeal.

“I will decide later, before time runs out,” he said.

Mensur Alija was sentenced in Helsingborg district court to two years and Mentor Alija three years in prison for attempted arson last week. The crime carries a penalty of two to eight years’ imprisonment.

The Alijas, who are from Landskrona in southern Sweden, were arrested in May after two jackets with a driver’s license, bank account information and keys to the brothers’ home were found outside Vilks’ home.

Both brothers have denied their involvement, even though Mensur Alija reportedly suffered serious burns on the night of May 15th, when the attack occurred. He has claimed he was involved in a barbecue accident.

The attack occured three days after Vilks was attacked during a lecture at Uppsala University.

Vilks has faced numerous death threats and a suspected assassination plot since his drawing of the Muslim prophet with the body of a dog was first published by Swedish regional daily Nerikes Allehanda in 2007 to illustrate an editorial on the importance of freedom of expression.

Their publication prompted protests by Muslims in the town of Örebro, west of Stockholm, where the newspaper is based, while Egypt, Iran and Pakistan made formal complaints.

An Al-Qaeda front organisation then offered $100,000 to anyone who murdered Vilks – with a $50,000 bonus if his throat was slit – and $50,000 for the death of Nerikes Allehanda editor-in-chief Ulf Johansson.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

VILKS

‘Jihadist’ in Swedish cartoonist plot arrested

The man, who was travelling with an Irish passport, is wanted by authorities in the US for being part of an al-Qaeda cell suspected of planning an attack on a Swedish cartoonist.

'Jihadist' in Swedish cartoonist plot arrested
The suspect in Spain. Photo: Mossos d'Esquadra

Ali Charaf Damache was detained on Thursday evening at a hotel in the tourist heart of Barcelona, the Catalan regional Interior Ministry confirmed on Friday.

Police were alerted to his presence in Barcelona thanks to a telephone tip-off to the emergency 112 number.

“We became aware that this person was in Barcelona earlier this week,” said Jordi Jané, the regional interior minister for Catalonia in a press conference.

The 50-year-old holds both Irish and Algerian nationality and is wanted by the United States for alleged membership of a terrorist cell linked to al-Qaeda that recruited and radicalized Muslims and financed and planned terrorist attacks.
 
 
 
The US issued an international arrest warrant for him in July 2011 and he was detained in Ireland last year although two extradition requests were denied and he was allowed to go free.
 
The US alleges Damache conspired with American woman Colleen LaRose, who used the online name Jihad Jane, and others to create a terror cell in Europe.
 
LaRose was sentenced in January 2014 to 10 years in prison after being convicted of planning to murder Swedish cartoonist Lars Vilks, who had depicted the head of the Muslim prophet Mohammad on a dog.
 
Lars Vilks emerged unscathed from an attack in Copenhagen last February in which two people died when a gunman opened fire during a talk on freedom of expression in which the cartoonist was taking part.