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QURAN BURNINGS

Stockholm Quran burner allegedly assaulted by man wearing boxing gloves

UPDATED: Salwan Momika, the man behind a spate of recent Quran burnings, was allegedly assaulted on Monday, reports Aftonbladet. But a man claiming to be behind the alleged assault says the fight was staged.

Stockholm Quran burner allegedly assaulted by man wearing boxing gloves
Salwan Momika holding a megaphone at one of his protests. Photo: Anders Wiklund/TT

Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet reported that Momika was attacked in the city of Södertälje, south of Stockholm, by a man wearing boxing gloves. The incident was filmed and shared on the TikTok app.

“Come on, let’s play, you and me,” it quotes the man as saying in Arabic.

Momika reportedly used a placard to defend himself before the man walked off.

Police declined to comment on specific individuals, but confirmed that they had received a report of a suspected assault in Södertälje on Monday. 

“There was some kind of argument between two people and it seems like one person took some kind of punches,” police spokesperson Per Fahlström told Aftonbladet.

But in a video on TikTok, a man claiming to be the alleged attacker says that he and Momika had agreed to fight – a claim Momika told the Expressen newspaper was a lie.

Momika, an Iraqi refugee who has said he supports the far-right Sweden Democrat party and wants to ban the Quran, is being investigated for alleged hate crimes at some of his Quran burning protests.

In recent months he has burned or desecrated copies of the Quran outside Stockholm’s main mosque as well as outside the Iranian and Iraqi embassies, sparking outrage in Muslim countries in particular.

Swedish security services cited reactions to the Quran burnings as among the reasons for its decision to raise Sweden’s national terror threat level from “elevated” to “high” last week.

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MALMÖ

Malmö police urge calm ahead of Quran burning in run-up to Eurovision

Updated: Malmö police are urging the public not to let themselves be provoked by the expected burning of a Quran on Friday, just before Eurovision week gets under way in the southern Swedish city.

Malmö police urge calm ahead of Quran burning in run-up to Eurovision

The protest, which is set to be held in central Malmö on the afternoon of May 3rd, has been granted permission by police to go ahead.

“We can’t reject [the permit]. Police have been criticised when we have rejected permits in various ways. There have been court decisions and we look at each case very thoroughly. But every situation is unique,” senior police officer Per Engström told the TT newswire.

“This is a call for everyone in the area to let it pass. The purpose is to cause offence and upset, but we’re telling the public to try to keep calm,” he added.

EXPLAINED:

Several other, separate, protests are also expected to go ahead in Malmö in the coming week, both in support and in protest of the European Broadcasting Union’s decision to let Israel participate in the song contest despite the brutal war with Hamas in Gaza.

Israel has warned its citizens not to visit Malmö during the week of Eurovision.

Quran burnings have become a hot topic in Sweden in recent years, including sparking fury in several Muslim countries which even put Sweden’s Nato application at risk. In Malmö, which has a large Muslim population, similar incidents have sparked riots on some occasions.

Police have little power to prevent protests featuring Quran burnings due to Sweden’s strong freedom of speech laws.

That’s not to say that setting a religious text on fire could never be prosecuted under hate crime laws (it all depends on context, as this court case shows), but Swedish law says that the police are only allowed to refuse a permit for a demonstration if it is “necessary to do so with respect to public order or safety at the gathering or, as a direct consequence of the gathering, in its immediate surroundings”.

This means that they cannot refuse a permit even if somebody says they are going to do something illegal, as long as it doesn’t endanger anyone.

Another application for a demonstration permit from the same people, a man and a woman, to walk through Malmö on Saturday while carrying Israeli flags and pulling a copy of the Quran on a leash has been denied by police. That’s because two people going for a walk through the city does not qualify as a public gathering and therefore does not need a formal permit.

A third application to burn a copy of the Quran in Rosengård, an immigrant-heavy area of Malmö, on Sunday is still being processed by police and hasn’t yet received a decision.

Updated to add the last two paragraphs

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