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The Swedish and EU flags fly in front of the Swedish Parliament in Stockholm. Two Afghans linked to the Islamic State group were arrested in Germany on suspicion of planning an attack around Sweden’s parliament in retaliation for Koran burnings, prosecutors said. Photo: AFP

German police detain 2 Afghans for plotting attack near Swedish parliament over Koran burnings

  • The pair made preparations for an attack on police and other people near the parliament in the Swedish capital, ‘in close coordination’ with IS members
  • Anti-Islam activists have carried out a string of public desecrations of the Koran in Sweden, sparking threats from Islamic extremists
Germany

German police detained on Tuesday two Afghan citizens accused of planning to attack police near the Swedish parliament in response to the burning of copies of the Koran, the Muslim holy book, federal prosecutors said.

The suspects, identified only as Afghan citizens Ibrahim M.G. and Ramin N., were detained in the eastern city of Gera, the federal prosecutor’s office said in a statement. The men were only identified by their first names and initial, according to German privacy laws.

The prosecutors said the Islamic State group’s affiliate in Afghanistan tasked the suspects in mid-2023 with carrying out an attack in Europe in response to Koran burnings in Sweden and other countries.

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The pair made preparations for an attack on police and other people near the parliament in the Swedish capital, Stockholm, “in close coordination” with IS members, including doing online research of the location and tried unsuccessfully to procure weapons, the statement said. The attack never materialised.

Anti-Islam activists have carried out a string of public desecrations of the Koran in Sweden, sparking outrage among Muslims around the world and threats from Islamic extremists. In October, a gunman killed two Swedish soccer fans before a match in Brussels.

Swedish authorities had raised the terror alert to its second-highest level in August. They were concerned of a similar escalation as the fury Denmark faced from Muslim countries in 2006, following the publication of newspaper caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad.

Denmark adopts law banning Koran burnings after Muslim fury over defiled texts

Danish consulates and embassies were burned, and the cartoonists faced death threats from radical Islamists. Danish officials’ attempts to explain how such caricatures were protected under freedom of speech were widely dismissed in the Muslim world.

Prosecutors said Ibrahim M. G. joined the IS affiliate in August last year. Together with Ramin N., he had raised €2,000 (US$2,170) in donations for the Islamic State group to help a member jailed in northern Syria.

The Afghans are suspected of crimes including providing support to a terrorist organisation, conspiracy to commit a crime, and infringements against trade laws.

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