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by Judith Bergman • February 16,
2019 at 5:00 am
- Perhaps the Council of
Europe considers Åberg's successful efforts of turning in fellow
Swedes to the police for perceived thought crimes an example
that other European countries should emulate?
- The pensioner
explained during questioning, "I was angry when I read
about how it worked with immigrants and how they avoid
punishment for everything they do. They get acquitted, though
they steal and do other things. It is unfair that those who
commit gross crimes can go free...." The pensioner said
that she would not have written what she did, had she known that
it was illegal. She evidently labored under the misconception
that she was still living in a democracy. In January, she was
sentenced to a fine of 4,000 Swedish kroner ($443). She lives on
a monthly pension of only 7,000 Swedish kroner ($775).
- Swedish authorities
clearly cannot -- or will not -- prosecute or convict the
jihadists whom they so generously welcome to the country; yet
they have no qualms charging and prosecuting harmless elderly
pensioners. One might add that a culture that respects the human
rights of returning ISIS fighters more than that of the elderly
women who are afraid of them, is all but done.

While the
Swedish Security Service is assuring the public that it will do
"even more" to limit the growth of terrorist environments
in Sweden, the Swedish government is exacerbating the problem by
welcoming returning ISIS jihadist fighters back into the country.
(Image source: iStock)
"Violence-promoting Islamist extremism currently
constitutes the biggest threat to Sweden," according to a
January 15 press release from the Swedish Security Service (Säpo).
"The level of the terror threat remains elevated, a three on a
five-point scale. This means that a terrorist act is likely to
occur," said Klas Friberg, head of Säpo.
"In order to meet the threat from terrorism, the
Security Service will in future work even more strategically to limit
the growth of extremist environments. It may be about dealing with [omhänderta]
persons who constitute a security threat or, in cooperation with
other authorities, working harder to ensure that these individuals
are prosecuted for other crimes - or have their opportunities
cut."
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