Britain warns citizens visiting Sweden of possible ‘terrorist attacks’

File photo: In updated travel advice, Britain's foreign ministry said Swedish authorities had successfully disrupted some planned attacks and made arrests. REUTERS/Bertil Ericson/TT News Agency

File photo: In updated travel advice, Britain's foreign ministry said Swedish authorities had successfully disrupted some planned attacks and made arrests. REUTERS/Bertil Ericson/TT News Agency

Published Aug 14, 2023

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Britain on Sunday warned citizens going to Sweden of possible terrorist attacks following Qur’an burnings by anti-Islam activists that have outraged Muslims.

In updated travel advice, Britain's foreign ministry said Swedish authorities had successfully disrupted some planned attacks and made arrests.

"You should be vigilant at this time," it said, adding that "terrorists are very likely to try and carry out attacks in Sweden" with places visited by foreigners potential targets.

In a statement acknowledging Britain's changed travel advice, Sweden's National Security Advisor Henrik Landerholm reiterated the increased threats to Sweden since the burnings.

Landerholm said the storming of Sweden's embassy in Iraq on July 19, an attempted attack on its embassy in Lebanon on Aug.9, and also the Aug. 1 shooting of an employee at a Swedish consulate in Turkey contributed to the risk assessment.

Qur’an burnings are permitted in Sweden under free speech rules, but Muslims see burning of their holy book as blasphemy.

The US government has also warned of possible terrorist attacks in Sweden in its travel advice.

In June, Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia and other Middle Eastern nations condemned the burning of the Qur’an by an Iraqi living in Sweden, warning such acts "inflame" the feelings of Muslims around the world.

Under a heavy police presence, Salwan Momika, a 37-year-old who fled to Sweden several years ago, stomped on the Qur’an before setting several pages alight in front of Stockholm's largest mosque, AFP reported.