[ad_1]
Source: “You want to stop it”
Of: Adam westin, Erik Melin
Published:
Updated:
Rasmus Paludan and his party are planning an action in Stockholm this weekend.
But already this morning a Quran was burned in Rinkeby, said to have been captured by police cameras.
Now police are looking for a blue Skoda registered in Denmark, according to information from Aftonbladet.
Photo: Janerik Henriksson / TT NYHETSBYRÅN
Rinkeby Square.
Rasmus Paludan, leader of the Danish right-wing extremist party Tight Course, has set his sights on Sweden.
During the last weekend of August, demonstrations were organized in Malmö, to which the police refused permission and which led to violent counter-demonstrations.
The party has now requested permission to hold a general meeting at five different locations in the Stockholm area on Saturday.
– They have not received a permit or a rejection, the matter is still being prepared, said Towe Hägg, spokesman for the Stockholm Police, during the morning.
The police have mobilized vigorously in the face of possible disturbances, according to information to Aftonbladet.
Information: available in the police film
But the Tight course seems to have started its activity in Stockholm as early as Thursday.
A movie posted on YouTube this morning shows a man burning a copy of the Quran outside Rinkeby Square. The man wears a tight-fitting cap and anti-Islamic T-shirt, and speaks Danish.
– I’ve heard of that. What I do know is that we are reviewing that film, says Towe Hägg of the Stockholm Police.
According to information from Aftonbladet, the burning of the Koran was caught by police surveillance cameras in Rinkeby Square. It must have happened at 5:57 this morning.
Police are now looking for a blue Skoda car, with Danish plates, which must have been involved, according to information from Aftonbladet.
“You want to stop him,” says a source.
However, the people involved are currently not suspected of any crime, according to the information.
Paludan: “I am Swedish”
In connection with the events in Malmö, Rasmus Paludan was banned from Sweden for two years.
Before the weekend, the party leader has said that he intends to go to Stockholm anyway, because he claims to be a Swedish citizen.
Paludan has pointed this out to the Swedish embassy in Denmark, which referred the case to the Swedish Immigration Board, Ekstrabladet writes.
After the riots in the Malmö Rosengård district, a woman in her 60s was arrested on suspicion of violent disturbances.
During the weekend, 14 people were suspected of this crime. Many were traveling from places other than Rosengård, according to police.
– I knew, for example, Helsingborgers. These people are like business travelers in distress. My feeling was that they weren’t religious reasons, but that many took the opportunity to burn and do so, Police Inspector Fredrik Brokop previously told Aftonbladet.
✓ The text is updated
Photography: JOHAN NILSSON / TT.
Rasmus Paludan.
Published: