Fox
News gloats … for now.
Riots
in Sweden raise questions about nation's egalitarian culture
Sweden
has long been a bastion of generous social welfare and an egalitarian
political culture. So many people were shocked when scores of youths
hurled rocks at police and set cars ablaze during rioting in several
largely immigrant areas near Stockholm this week.
23
May, 2013
Few
dispute that the violence was probably touched off by the fatal
police shooting of an elderly man who had locked himself in an
apartment wielding a knife. But some residents in the area accused
police who responded to the violence of racism.
For
some, the real reason for the unrest is the high unemployment and
isolation of youths in the southern and western Stockholm suburbs
where the violence occurred -- ones who see little future for
themselves or access to Sweden's prosperity.
"The
segregation in Stockholm increases all the time, and it's happening
fast," said Nina Edstrom, a social anthropologist who promotes
integration at a center for multiculturalism in Fittja, where some of
the violence occurred. "There are very large social differences.
There are many unemployed, frustrated young people. I'm not surprised
something like this happens," she said.
Still,
Edstrom added, it would be a mistake to see the youths involved in
the riots as political activists.
Overall,
about 15 percent of Sweden's 9.5 million people were born abroad,
compared to 10 percent 10 years ago. The influx has mostly come from
war-torn countries such as Iraq, Somalia, former Yugoslavia,
Afghanistan and Syria.
In
2012 alone, Sweden accepted 44,000 asylum seekers, up by nearly 50
percent from a year earlier.
During
the rioting, 15-year-old Sebastian Horniak said he saw police firing
warning shots in the air and calling a woman a "monkey."
Quena
Soruco, a representative for Megafonen, an organization that
represents citizens in Stockholm's suburbs, said she heard police say
"rats, hobos, Negroes."
The
unrest in Fittja and the Husby area is a challenge for the
center-right government of Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt, which
after seven years in power is trailing in polls and has come under
fire for failing to address social problems.
The
rioting also has added fuel to arguments from the far-right Sweden
Democrats party, which polls now show as Sweden's fourth biggest
party.
Some
say that one reason such immigrant areas can feel isolating is the
growing disparity between the haves and have nots in Sweden, as in
many other Western countries.
Despite
Sweden's high living standards and its egalitarian ways, the country
has seen the biggest surge in inequality of any Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development country over the past 25 years,
according to a recent OECD report.
The
difference is striking between native Swedes and the fast-growing
immigrant population.
In
Husby, the neighborhood west of Stockholm where the violence started
Sunday, around 80 percent of the 11,000 residents are either first or
second generation immigrants. Still, the area appears well kept and
nothing like a slum.
"We
have such wonderful things. We have a mixture of cultures. You go out
on the streets and you know your neighbors," said Soruco, 26,
who lives in Husby.
However,
she also said youth unemployment is high there and that nearly 50
percent of the kids in Husby finish junior high school with grades
too low to get into high school.
"I
do not think that Sweden is as equal as some people try to paint it
to be. We see it every day: people trying to get jobs and get
rejected because of their last name, because of how they look, or
even because of where they live," she said.
Outside
a grocery store, local soccer coach Shain Akbari, 30, stood talking
to a group of youths. He is upset that youths hurled rocks at police
and firefighters, burned down buildings and set nearly 100 cars
ablaze.
"It
is tragic ... it's wrong," he said. But Akbari, a Swede of
Iranian background who grew up in Husby, said the neighborhood has
changed drastically in the past 10 years.
"Before
it wasn't like this. Before we had Swedish friends who played on the
same football team. We went to school together and they helped us
integrate into society. You got a job through friends. But it isn't
like that now. Now they are locked in here. They don't leave the
area. ... They have no possibilities."
Camilla
Salazar, who works at the youth center Fryshuset, agreed.
"I
speak to young people in certain suburbs who say, `It would have been
fun to get to know a Swede,"' she said. She also noted that as
the violence began in Husby, many Swedes in more prosperous areas
were preoccupied celebrating their country's World Cup ice hockey
victory.
Prime
Minister Reinfeldt has acknowledged that Sweden's income disparities
increased, but said it primarily occurred before he came to power in
2006, and that he remains proud of his country's liberal immigration
policies.
Reinfeldt
said the transition can be trying, but he added: "We are more
open than other countries. Long term, as a society, we win on this.
It will lead to more people getting jobs. It will contribute to a
more exciting and open society."
He
urged citizens to come together to stop the violence, and on
Wednesday night hundreds of Husby residents took to the streets to
oppose the violence.
From
RT
‘They
don’t want to integrate’: Fourth night of youth rioting rocks
Stockholm
RT,
23 May, 2013
Youth gang riots have rocked the Swedish capital Stockholm for four straight nights. Hundreds of mostly immigrant teenagers tore through the suburbs, smashing windows and burning cars in the country’s worst outbreak of violence in years.
23 May, 2013
Youth gang riots have rocked the Swedish capital Stockholm for four straight nights. Hundreds of mostly immigrant teenagers tore through the suburbs, smashing windows and burning cars in the country’s worst outbreak of violence in years.
On
the fourth night of violence, youths torched over 30 cars in 15
neighborhoods along with a restaurant in Skogas, south of Stockholm.
Three law enforcement officers were injured, police spokesperson
Kjell Lindgren reported.
Stockholm
firefighters were busy throughout the night, saying they had “never
before seen so many fires raging at the same time.” Some
90 blazes were reported in total, most of them reportedly caused by
the rioters. Still, the fourth night of violence was relatively quiet
compared to the previous three, RT's Peter Oliver reported from
Stockholm.
Leaders
of immigrant communities were out on the streets in a bid to stop
young people from rioting. Despite their efforts, as soon as the
night fell, groups of arsonists took to the streets to set cars on
fire. RT's Peter Oliver witnessed rioters throwing stones at police
and journalists alike.
RT's
Peter Oliver. Screenshot from RT video.
Civil
disorder in Stockholm started on Sunday, when police shot and killed
a 69-old-man in his apartment after he confronted officers with a
machete; the unrest has since continued throughout week.
Community
leaders insist that a main reason for the violence is the high rate
of unemployment in immigrant communities, particularly in the suburb
of Husby near central Stockholm, one of the worst affected by the
nighttime violence, Peter Oliver reported.
Although
Sweden’s unemployment rate is below the EU average, joblessness
among those under 25 has reached nearly 25 percent. The RT crew in
Stockholm noted that a majority of those taking part in the violence
are young.
Parents
of the rampaging teenagers and community religious leaders are now
spending sleepless nights on the street in an effort to prevent their
children from wreaking havoc.
Firemen
extinguish a burning car in Kista after youths rioted in few
differant suburbs around Stockholm on May 21, 2013.(AFP Photo /
Jonathan Nackstrand)
Meanwhile,
the Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt blamed the violence
on “hooligans” and said they did not represent
the majority in the rioting neighborhoods.
“I
think it’s dangerous to draw a picture of Sweden with a capital
separated from its suburbs. I don’t think that’s true. I think
the dividing line runs straight through Husby, with a majority
population and then a small group of troublemakers,” Reinfeldt
said.
But
the Husby youth taking part in riots told Reuters they are indeed
divided from the rest of Stockholm, struggling to find a full-time
job with their Husby address. Most of the interviewed rioters were
reportedly unemployed.
The
claims of social exclusion in immigrant-dominated suburbs have been
partly conceded by Sweden’s Integration Minister Erik Ullenhag, who
said the ministry is aware of discrimination in this area.
But the riots “don’t
improve the image of these areas, where there is a lot of positive
stuff going on,” he
added
A
car set on fire burns, following riots in the Stockholm suburb of
Kista late May 21, 2013.(Reuters / Fredrik Sandberg)
These migrants have failed to
integrate into Swedish society, and are only in the country to enjoy
the country’s social benefits system, Swedish journalist Ingrid
Carlqvist told RT.
Young
Muslims who enjoy tolerance, social institutions and welfare while
living in Sweden nevertheless refuse to integrate into the West,
Gerolf Annemans told RT. Annemans is the parliamentary leader of
Vlaams Belang (‘Flemish Interest’), a Belgian far-right
nationalist political party.
“It’s
always the same problem. There is a massive refusal by Muslim
youngsters of the basics of Western society... and they take
any excuse whatsoever to show that with violence – that is where
the problem is,” he said.
“The
problem is not from the Swedish government or from the Swedish
people,” the
editor in chief of Dispatch International said. “The
last 20 years or so, we have seen so many immigrants coming to Sweden
that really don’t like Sweden. They do not want to integrate, they
do not want to live in [Swedish] society: Working, paying taxes and
so on.”
“The
people come here now because they know that Sweden will give them
money for nothing. They don’t have to work, they don’t have to
pay taxes – they can just stay here and get a lot of money. That is
really a problem,” Carlqvist
added.
“The
police could do so much, [instead] they have told the public that
they mean to do as little as possible. But they could go there and
use water cannons, they could not let people out onto the streets at
night. There are so many things they could do within the law – but
they don’t do it,” she
said.
Firefighters
extinguish a burning car, following riots in the Stockholm suburb of
Kista late May 21, 2013.(Reuters / Fredrik Sandberg)
“They
[Muslim youths] have always sought excuse to show that they are not
agreeing with the basic values of Western society,” Annemans
said, pointing to the recent cases of the Boston Marathon bombing in
the US and yesterday’s beheading of a British soldier in the UK.
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