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GOTHENBURG TERROR PLOT

CRIME

Four arrested for preparing terror crimes

Police in Gothenburg, on the west coast of Sweden, arrested four people during the early hours of Sunday on probable cause suspected of preparing terrorist crime, confirmed Sara Kvarnström, press officer of the Swedish Security Services (Säpo), to news agency TT.

Four arrested for preparing terror crimes

“The arrest was made with the help of the National Task Force and Gothenburg’s police force,” she said.

The National Task Force (Nationella insatsstyrkan) is the Swedish police’s special operations unit.

Sweden’s terror alert level has been at an ‘elevated’ level for a year, but Kvarnström reports that incidents in Gothenburg haven’t raised the alert level further.

“There’s an ongoing judgment made, and it can always be changed. But right now we’ve judged that there is no reason to take security-raising measures in Swedish society in general,” Kvarnström told TT.

“There’s no cause for the general public to be concerned,” she said.

Sara Kvarnström doesn’t want to comment further on the events of the night.

The arrest occurred during the night between Saturday and Sunday, near Röda Stens Konsthall, an art gallery by the Älvsborg Bridge.

Gothenburg’s International Biennial for Contemporary Art’s opening party was ongoing at the gallery, when the police arrived on the scene.

Just after midnight, the police asked the gallery’s manager to evacuate the area.

“I don’t know much more than that the police threw us out, and said they’d arrested four people suspected of terror crimes. Then they cordoned off the whole area,” said manager Mia Christersdotter Norman to daily newspaper Expressen.

Gothenburg police confirmed that an area around Röda Sten has been cordoned off.

On Sunday morning, the police website informed the public that the area was evacuated and cordoned off because of “a threat that implied serious danger to lives, health or extensive property damage.”

“I can’t say anything else, because we aren’t giving any information from here,” said Gunilla Gustafsson, of the police’s county communications centre, to TT.

Röda Sten now shows no sign of last night’s evacuation. Photographer Adam Ihse, from Scanpix photo agency, was at the spot earlier Sunday morning.

“There’s nothing left, no cars, no policemen. It looks exactly like normal,” said Ihse to TT.

The arrest was made ten years to the day since the terror attacks in New York.

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EUROVISION

Swedish police pleased after Eurovision weekend passes peacefully

Despite concerns that tension in the run-up to Eurovision could escalate into violence, Swedish police said they were pleased with how the week went.

Swedish police pleased after Eurovision weekend passes peacefully

A total of 20 people were taken into custody by police on the final night of Eurovision in Malmö. One person was arrested and is suspected of violence against a police officer. But despite the tension during the event, police described the night as calm, all things considered.

“I’m very pleased,” police commander Per Engström said in a statement. “The event could go ahead in a safe and secure manner, while police secured the opportunity for citizens to, in a democratic spirit, express various opinions – almost completely without disturbances.”

A major pro-Palestinian demonstration on Saturday afternoon went ahead peacefully, with organisers collaborating closely with police. Thousands of people marched through Malmö, carrying pro-Palestinian symbols, and some held up signs referencing EBU’s separate decision to disqualify The Netherlands’ entry Joost Klein after he was accused of inapproppriate behaviour towards a photographer.

Things got more tense when hundreds of people also gathered outside the arena during the final, with those protesters lacking a demonstration permit.

Swedish, Norwegian and Danish police formed a human chain to push people away when they tried to get through to the area where the Eurovision audience was queuing. People who didn’t move voluntarily were carried away, with some shouting “fuck the police”, “shame on you” and “you support genocide”, according to reporters on the scene. Police said they used pepper spray on some occasions.

Nobody was seriously injured in the protests, according to police.

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