Posted Friday, May 24 2013 at 05:21
Stockholm
At least nine cars were torched and two schools
and a police station were set ablaze as riots swept through Stockholm's
immigrant-dominated suburbs early Friday for the fifth straight night,
police and firefighters said.
The riots, which have shattered Sweden's image
abroad as a peaceful and egalitarian nation, have sparked a debate about
the assimilation of immigrants, who make up about 15 per cent of the
population.
Many of the immigrants who have arrived due to the
country's generous refugee policy struggle to learn the language and
find employment, despite numerous government programmes.
Early Friday, police told Swedish news agency TT
eight people had been arrested so far for the night's rioting, but no
injuries were reported.
In Rinkeby, one of the city's immigrant-dominated
areas, firefighters rushed to put out flames that engulfed six cars
parked alongside each other. Five cars were totally gutted, and one
sustained more moderate damage, according to an AFP photographer on the
scene.
Three more cars were torched in the Norsborg
suburb, and a police station in Aelvsjoe was set on fire but quickly
extinguished, police said.
Firefighters meanwhile said a school in another
immigrant-heavy suburb, Tensta, was set ablaze but quickly extinguished,
and a nursery school in the Kista suburb was also on fire.
And police in Soedertaelje, a town south of
Stockholm, said rioters threw stones at them as they responded to
reports of cars set alight.
The previous night, the fire brigade had been called to some 90 different blazes, most of them caused by rioters.
"We are gradually becoming more like other countries," said Aje Carlbom, a social anthropologist at Malmoe University.
The troubles, which began Sunday in the Husby
suburb, are believed to have been triggered by the fatal police shooting
of a 69-year-old Husby resident last week after the man wielded a
machete in public.
The man had fled to his apartment, where police
have said they tried to mediate but ended up shooting him dead in what
they claimed was self-defence.
Local activists said the shooting sparked anger
among youths who claim to have suffered from police brutality. During
the first night of rioting, they said police had called them "tramps,
monkeys and negroes."
Police meanwhile downplayed the scale of the events.
"Every injured person is a tragedy, every torched
car is a failure for society... but Stockholm is not burning. Let's have
a level-headed view of the situation," Ulf Johansson, deputy police
chief for Stockholm county, said Thursday.
Residents of areas largely populated by immigrants are suffering from segregation, anthropologist Carlbom told AFP.
"Living as a young person in these segregated
areas can be very hard in many ways. You have virtually no contact with
other Swedes and a lot of times I don't think you have a good
understanding of Swedish society," he said.
For example, some 80 percent of the 12,000 residents in Husby are immigrants.
Due to its liberal immigration policy, Sweden has
in recent decades become one of Europe's top destinations for
immigrants, both in absolute numbers and relative to its size.
In the past decade it has welcomed hundreds of
thousands of immigrants from Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Somalia and the
Balkans, among others.
This is not the first time the Scandinavian country has seen riots among immigrants.
In 2010, up to 100 youths threw bricks, set fires
and attacked the local police station in the immigrant-dominated suburb
of Rinkeby for two nights.
And in 2008, hundreds of youths rioted against
police in the southern Swedish town of Malmoe, sparked by the closure of
an Islamic cultural centre in the suburb of Rosengaard that housed a
mosque.
Integration Minister Erik Ullenhag attributed the
violence to high unemployment and social exclusion in Sweden's
immigrant-dominated areas.
"We know that there is discrimination in these
areas, and these events don't improve the image of these areas, where
there is a lot of positive stuff going on but which is totally eclipsed
right now," he told TT.
In Husby, overall unemployment was 8.8 per cent in
2012, compared to 3.3 per cent in Stockholm as a whole, according to
official data.
And a total of 12 per cent in Husby received social benefits last year, compared to 3.6 per cent in Stockholm as a whole.
The riots have received international media
attention, with some comparisons being drawn to similar problems
assimilating immigrants in other European countries such as Britain and
France.
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