Multi Culturalism Gone Wrong
Swedish Multiculturalism Goes Awry
by Soeren Kern,
GATESTONE INSTITUTE
“Sweden is the best Islamic State.”
Adly Abu Hajar, Imam based in Malmö
Hundreds of Muslim immigrants have rampaged through parts of the
Swedish capital of Stockholm, torching cars and buses, setting fires,
and hurling rocks at police.
The unrest — a predictable
consequence of Sweden’s failed model of multiculturalism, which does not
encourage Muslim immigrants to assimilate or integrate into Swedish
society — is an ominous sign of things to come.
The trouble
began after police fatally shot an elderly man brandishing a machete in a
Muslim-majority neighborhood. Although the exact circumstances of the
May 13 incident remain unclear, police say they shot the 69-year-old man
(his nationality has not been disclosed) in self-defense after he
allegedly threatened them with the weapon.
Two days later, on
May 15, a Muslim youth organization called Megafonen arranged a protest
against alleged police brutality and demanded an independent
investigation and a public apology.
On May 19, Muslim youths
initiated a riot in Husby, a heavily Muslim suburb in the western part
of Stockholm where more than 80% of the residents originate from Africa
and the Middle East.
At least 100 masked Muslim youths set fire
to cars and buildings, smashed windows, vandalized property and hurled
rocks and bottles at police and rescue services in Husby. The riots
quickly spread to at least 15 other parts of Stockholm, including the
districts of Fittja, Hagsätra, Kista, Jakobsberg, Norsborg, Skaerholmen,
Skogås and Vaarberg.
After two nights of spiraling violence,
Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt appealed for calm, condemning
the riots as hooliganism. But his plea (“Everyone must pitch in to
restore calm — parents, adults”) failed to prevent more nights of
unrest, during which Muslim youth set fire to two schools, a police
station, a restaurant, and a cultural center, and burned more than 50
cars and buses.
The unrest — which has many parallels to the
Muslim riots that occurred in France in 2005 — has shocked Swedes who
have long turned a blind eye to immigration policies that have
encouraged the establishment of a parallel Muslim society in Sweden.
Although there are no official statistics of Muslims in Sweden, the US
State Departmentreported in 2011 that there are now between 450,000 and
500,000 Muslims in the country, or about 5% of the total population of
9.5 million.
Muslim immigration to Sweden has been fostered by open-door asylum policies that are among the most generous in the world.
During the early 1990s, for example, Sweden granted asylum to nearly
100,000 refugees fleeing the wars in the Balkans. Sweden has also been a
magnet for refugees from Iraq; as a result of the Iran-Iraq War
(1980-1988), the Gulf War (1990-1991) and the Iraq War (2003-2011),
there are now more than 120,000 Iraqis living in Sweden. In fact, Iraqis
(both Christians and Muslims) now make up the second-largest ethnic
minority group in Sweden, second only to ethnic Finns.
More
recently, Sweden has granted asylum to thousands of refugees from
Afghanistan, Somalia and Syria, as well as from Azerbaijan, Bangladesh,
Cameroon, Congo, Egypt, Eritrea, Iran, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Lebanon, Libya, Mali, Mauritania, Morocco, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi
Arabia, Sudan, Tunisia, Turkey, Uzbekistan and Yemen.
Sweden is
forecast to receive some 54,000 asylum seekers in 2013, according to
the Swedish Migration Board (Migrationsverket), the highest level since
the 1990s. In 2012, Sweden accepted 44,000 asylum seekers, up by nearly a
half from 2011.
Sweden is expected to receive at least 18,000
Syrians in 2013 alone. Since September 2012, asylum seekers have arrived
in Sweden at the rate of 1,250 per week, far more than the Migration
Board’s capacity of between 500 and 700.
Sweden is a prime
destination for asylum seekers because the country offers new immigrants
free housing and social welfare benefits upon arrival. But many
immigrants from Africa, Asia and the Middle East are poorly educated and
have great difficulty finding a job in Sweden.
As a result,
many immigrants are segregated from Swedish society and often live in
areas where much of the population comes from countries other than
Sweden. This in turn has encouraged the creation of parallel societies
and the establishment of so-called no-go zones, parts of Sweden that are
off limits to non-Muslims.
In some areas, no-go zones function
as microstates governed by Islamic Sharia law where Swedish authorities
have effectively lost control and are unable to provide even basic
public aid such as police, fire fighting and ambulance services.
In the southern city of Malmö — where Muslims make up more than 25% of
the population — fire and emergency workers refuse to enter Malmö’s
mostly Muslim Rosengaard district without police escorts. The male
unemployment rate in Rosengaard is estimated to be above 80%. When fire
fighters attempted to put out a fire at Malmö’s main mosque, they were
attacked by stone throwers.
In the Swedish city of Gothenburg,
Muslim youth have hurled petrol bombs at police cars. In the city’s
Angered district, where more than 15 police cars were recently
destroyed, teenagers have been pointing green lasers at the eyes of
police officers, some of whom have been temporarily blinded.
In
Gothenburg’s Backa district, youth have been throwing stones at
patrolling officers. Gothenburg police have also been struggling to deal
with the problem of Muslim teenagers burning cars and attacking
emergency services in several areas of the city.
At the same
time, Muslim immigrants are becoming increasing assertive in demanding
special rights and privileges for Islam in Sweden.
In February,
for example, a mosque in Stockholm received final approval from the
mayor’s office to begin sounding public prayer calls from its minaret,
the first time such permission has ever been granted in Sweden.
A majority of the members of the city planning committee in the
southern Stockholm suburb of Botkyrka voted to repeal a 1994 prohibition
on such prayer calls, thereby opening the way for amuezzin to begin
calling Muslims to prayer from the top of a 32-meter (104-foot) minaret
at a Turkish mosque in the Fittja district of the city.
The
issue was put to a vote after Ismail Okur, the chairman of the Botkyrka
Islamic Association (Islamiska föreningen i Botkyrka), filed a petition
with the city in January 2012 demanding permission to allow public
prayer calls at the mosque.
In an interview with the Swedish
newspaper Dagen, Okur said earlier generations of Muslim immigrants “did
not dare” to press the issue, but that he represents the “new guys” who
are determined to “exercise their right to religious freedom” in
Sweden.
When told that Sweden has historically been a Christian
country, Okur responded: “So it was perhaps before, during the 1930s
and 1940s. Now it is a new era. We are more than 100,000 [sic] Muslims
in Sweden. Should we not have our religion as well, especially here in
Botkyrka, where we are so many?”
Swedish multiculturalists
agree. The Multicultural Center (Mångkulturellt centrum) in Botkyrka
recently called on Swedes to “separate whiteness from Swedishness in
order to be a socially sustainable future Swedishness.”
On the
other hand, a growing number of Swedes are beginning to have second
thoughts about the long-term sustainability of multiculturalism and mass
immigration.
Immigration Minister Tobias Billström recently
marked a turning point in the debate when he told the Swedish newspaper
Dagens Nyheter that Sweden needs to tighten rules for asylum seekers and
other would-be immigrants to reduce the number of people coming into
the country.
“Today Sweden is one of the countries that
receives the most immigrants in the EU. That’s not sustainable,”
Billström said. “Today, people are coming to households where the only
income is support from the municipality. Is that reasonable?” he added.
Reflecting the unease about immigrants among many voters, an
anti-immigrant party, the conservative Sweden Democrats, have risen to
third-place in the polls ahead of a general election set to take place
in September 2014.
But the riots in Stockholm imply that the
damage has already been done. The fatal flaw of Swedish multiculturalism
has been to grant asylum to hundreds of thousands of immigrants who
have no prospect of ever finding a job or making a meaningful
contribution to Swedish society. Many immigrants are, and will remain,
wards of the state.
The Malmö-based Imam Adly Abu Hajar, in an
interview with the newspaper Skånska Dagbladet, recently summed it up
this way: “Sweden is the best Islamic state.”
Soeren Kern is a
Senior Fellow at the New York-based Gatestone Institute. He is also
Senior Fellow for European Politics at the Madrid-based Grupo de
Estudios Estratégicos / Strategic Studies Group. Follow him on Facebook.
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