2014 mosque arson attacks in Sweden

The 2014 Sweden mosques arson attacks were a series of arson attacks on three mosques in Sweden that took place during one week at the end of 2014.[4] In addition to being struck by Molotov cocktails, some mosques were vandalized with racist graffiti.[4][6] The first incident, the only to have caused injuries, was however later found by police investigations to have been an accident in the mosque kitchen caused by an overheated deep-fryer.[7][8][9]

2014 mosque arson attacks in Sweden
Eslöv
Uppsala
Eskilstuna
2014 mosque arson attacks in Sweden (Sweden)
LocationEslöv, Uppsala and Eskilstuna, Sweden
Date25 December 2014[1][2]
1 January 2015[3]
Attack type
Arson[4]
WeaponsMolotov cocktails[4]
MotiveAnti-immigration[5]
Anti-Islam[5]

Attacks

On Christmas, five people suffered injuries when, according to early reports, a petrol bomb had been tossed through the window of a mosque in Eskilstuna. Up to 20 people, including children, were in the mosque at the time of the attack.[1][2] Police later said they were investigating the incident as an accident, considering it unlikely to have been a deliberate attack.[7] It was later reported that an overheated deep-fryer was the probable cause of the fire.[8][9]

The second attack took place on Monday in the southern Swedish town of Eslöv just after 3 am local time. No one was injured on that occasion.[5][10] Early on New Year’s morning, a third attack hit a mosque in Uppsala.[3][11][12]

Background

The attacks happened at a time of rising anti-immigrant sentiment and political tension over Sweden's status as the leading destination in the European Union (per capita) for asylum seekers.[13]

Response

Prime Minister Stefan Löfven said that the attacks were "hateful violence" and denounced the crime. He said that the attacks were not representative of Sweden. and that "no-one in Sweden should be afraid of practicing their religion".

Samir Muric, the imam in Eslöv, told a Swedish news agency: "Unfortunately this is probably something to do with Islamophobia. I live nearby, and it’s beginning to feel unsafe."

On January 2, 2015, hundreds of anti-racist demonstrators in three major Swedish cities rallied in support of Muslims.[14][15]

See also

References

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