Home World News Salwan Momika Quran protests: Iraqi man who carried out several Quran burnings in Sweden, shot dead; five people arrested

Salwan Momika Quran protests: Iraqi man who carried out several Quran burnings in Sweden, shot dead; five people arrested

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Salwan Momika. File photo: Via Reuters

An Iraqi refugee and anti-Islam campaigner was shot dead in Sweden hours before he was due to receive a court verdict following a trial over burning the Quran, and five people were arrested over the shooting on Thursday (January 30, 2025).

The five were arrested in connection with the incident late on Wednesday (Jan. 29) and ordered detained by a prosecutor, Swedish police said on their website. They did not say if the shooter was among those detained.

Salwan Momika, 38, was shot in a house in the town of Sodertalje near Stockholm, public broadcaster SVT reported, citing unnamed police sources.

Momika had burned copies of the Quran, the Muslim holy book, in public demonstrations in 2023 against Islam.

A Stockholm court had been due to sentence Momika and another man on Thursday (Jan. 30) in a criminal trial over “offences of agitation against an ethnic or national group”, but said the announcement of the verdict had been postponed.

A police spokesperson confirmed a man was shot dead in Sodertalje, but gave no other details.

The other defendant in the same court case was giving interviews on Thursday (Jan. 30) and posted a message on X, saying: “I’m next”.

The Security Service said that police were leading the investigation but “we are following the development of events closely to see what impact this may have on Swedish security”, a spokesperson told Reuters.

Swedish media reported that Momika was streaming live on TikTok at the time he was shot. A video seen by Reuters showed police picking up a phone and ending a livestream that appeared to be from Momika’s TikTok account.

Sweden in 2023 raised its terrorism alert to the second-highest level and warned of threats against Swedes at home and abroad after the Quran burnings, many of them by Momika, outraged Muslims and triggered threats from jihadists.

While the Swedish government condemned the wave of Quran burnings in 2023, it was initially regarded as a protected form of free speech.

Sweden’s migration agency in 2023 wanted to deport Momika for giving false information on his residency application, but couldn’t as he risked torture and inhumane treatment in Iraq.

Burning the Quran is seen by Muslims as a blasphemous act because they consider it the literal word of God.



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