Penticton Herald

Swedes questionin­g immigratio­n policies in wake of terror attack

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STOCKHOLM (AP) — One brutal attack by a man who drove a stolen truck into shoppers in Stockholm has brought Sweden’s open-door immigratio­n policies under increased scrutiny — and raised the question if Swedish society, considered democratic and egalitaria­n, has failed to integrate its newcomers.

The suspect in Friday’s attack, a 39-year-old native of Uzbekistan who has been arrested by police, was on authoritie­s’ radar but they dismissed him as a “marginal character.”

The attack killed four people and wounded 15. In response, hundreds gathered Saturday at the site of the crash in the Swedish capital, building a wall of flowers on the aluminum fence put up to keep them away from the site’s broken glass and twisted metal.

Sweden’s police chief Dan Eliason said officers found something in the stolen beer truck that “could be a bomb” or an incendiary device, but said they were still investigat­ing.

“We have been too liberal to take in people who perhaps we thought would have good minds. But we are too good-hearted,” said Stockholm resident Ulov Ekdahl, a 67-year-old commercial broker who went to the memorial.

Joachim Kemiri, who was born in Sweden to a Tunisian father and a Swedish mother, says migrants and refugees had been arriving in too large numbers.

“Too many of them have been coming in too fast,” the 29-year-old said. “It’s too much.”

Sweden has long been known for its open-door policy toward migrants and refugees. But after the Scandinavi­an country of 10 million took in a record 163,000 refugees in 2015 — the highest per-capita rate in Europe — Prime Minister Stefan Lofven conceded it could no longer cope with the influx.

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