Stockholm suburbs suffered a fifth straight night of unrest as rioters burned two schools and 15 cars, and tried to damage a police station, Swedish police say.
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May 24, 2013, 7:25:31 PM5/24/13
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Stockholm
suburbs suffered a fifth straight night of unrest as rioters
burned two schools and 15 cars, and tried to damage a police
station, Swedish police say.
Police spokesman Kjell Lindgren said Friday that 13 people, aged
between 18 and 25, had been detained after the disturbances.
Rioting on this scale is unprecedented for the Swedish capital and
has raised questions about the country's attempts to integrate
foreign-born residents, who now make up some 15 per cent of the
population, the BBC reported.
Stockholm county police Chief Mats Loefving blamed local youths,
both with and without criminal records.
"In the midst of all this there is a small group of professional
criminals, who are taking advantage of the situation to commit
crimes like this," the BBC cited him telling Swedish Radio.
The trouble began last week, sparked by perceptions of police
brutality after officers shot and killed a knife-wielding man who
had locked himself in his apartment.
Lindgren said Friday, however, that the overnight violence was
less intense than previous nights, and that the participants
seemed less aggressive.
"In terms of extent, it is a little less, a little quieter,"
Lindgren told Reuters.
In one suburb, more than 80 per cent of the 12,000 or so
inhabitants are from an immigrant background, and most are from
Turkey, the Middle East and Somalia, the BBC reported.
Community activists have accused the police of using racist
language. Police have tried to calm the situation by speaking with
community leaders.