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Vandals hit Zlatan’s Stockholm home with fermented herring and torch statue in Malmö

Police are investigating after vandals targeted Zlatan Ibrahimovic's statue in Malmö and fermented herring was poured over his door after the football player announced he was buying shares in a rival football club.

Vandals hit Zlatan's Stockholm home with fermented herring and torch statue in Malmö
Racist abuse was spray painted on the ground next to Zlatan Ibrahimovic's statue. Photo: Andreas Hillergren/TT

A statue of the player in Malmö was attacked with fire and paint while the word “Judas” was daubed across the front door of his residence in Stockholm.

The perpetrators of the threatening acts have not been identified but Ibrahimovic angered fans of Malmö FF (MFF) – the club where he started his professional career in 1999 – on Wednesday when he announced he had bought a share in rival club Hammarby.

In Malmö, several people, most of them wearing hoods, vandalized a statue of Ibrahimovic that was unveiled just two months ago. Near the monument they wrote the words “Cigani dö” ('gypsy' in Bosnian, and 'die' in Swedish) in spray paint.

Born in Malmö, Ibrahimovic is the son of a Bosnian father and Croatian mother.

Videos posted on social media showed masked people lighting fires and aiming them at the statue. There was no significant damage and a protective barrier has since been put up around it.

In Stockholm, the door of the former Juventus, Barcelona, Paris Saint-Germain and Manchester United forward's home was covered with the word Judas, and a tin of surströmming, a notoriously smelly fermented herring, had been opened and poured outside the building.

“An investigation has been opened into vandalism and threats with suspected hate crime motive. Zlatan Ibrahimovic is the plaintiff,” a police spokesman told AFP.

Earlier on Wednesday, angry supporters had slipped a toilet seat on to one of the statue's arms.


Zlatan Ibrahimovic photographed with a Hammarby jersey. Photo: Hammarbyfotboll.se/TT

Hammarby, a Stockholm-based team playing alongside MFF in Sweden's top league, announced on Wednesday morning that Ibrahimovic had bought around 25 percent of the shares in the club.

“He's turned his back on the city and what made him who he is,” Kaveh Hosseinpour, vice-president of the MFF supporters' club, told broadcaster TV4.

At noon on Thursday, nearly 7,000 people had signed an online petition calling for the immediate removal of his statue in Malmö.

“How could you do this to us?” one outraged signatory wrote while another proclaimed that “everything can't just be about money”.

Ibrahimovic, whose contract with Los Angeles Galaxy expires at the end of the year, has not announced whether he will continue his career at another club.

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