Sweden: Extremism grows, chiefly radical Islamists

AP  |  Copenhagen 

The Swedish security service SAPO says the number of people in with extremist views has grown to several thousands, mainly among people with sympathies for radical Islam.

Its head, Anders Thornberg, says "we have never seen anything like it" and propaganda from the Islamic State group was a key factor.



He says the figure was in the hundreds a few years ago, adding it was "a historic challenge with extremist environments growing."

Thornberg told Sweden's agency TT today that SAPO gets about 6,000 pieces of intelligence every month, up from 2,000 five years ago. He didn't go into specifics.

Sweden's threat assessment remains three on a five-level scale. On April 7, the driver of stolen truck killed five pedestrians and injured 14 in central Stockholm.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Sweden: Extremism grows, chiefly radical Islamists

The Swedish security service SAPO says the number of people in Sweden with extremist views has grown to several thousands, mainly among people with sympathies for radical Islam. Its head, Anders Thornberg, says "we have never seen anything like it" and propaganda from the Islamic State group was a key factor. He says the figure was in the hundreds a few years ago, adding it was "a historic challenge with extremist environments growing." Thornberg told Sweden's news agency TT today that SAPO gets about 6,000 pieces of intelligence every month, up from 2,000 five years ago. He didn't go into specifics. Sweden's threat assessment remains three on a five-level scale. On April 7, the driver of stolen truck killed five pedestrians and injured 14 in central Stockholm. The Swedish security service SAPO says the number of people in with extremist views has grown to several thousands, mainly among people with sympathies for radical Islam.

Its head, Anders Thornberg, says "we have never seen anything like it" and propaganda from the Islamic State group was a key factor.

He says the figure was in the hundreds a few years ago, adding it was "a historic challenge with extremist environments growing."

Thornberg told Sweden's agency TT today that SAPO gets about 6,000 pieces of intelligence every month, up from 2,000 five years ago. He didn't go into specifics.

Sweden's threat assessment remains three on a five-level scale. On April 7, the driver of stolen truck killed five pedestrians and injured 14 in central Stockholm.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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