Sweden prepares for sixth night of violence  
 
Extra police have been called to Stockholm in an attempt to end the riots that 
have blighted the city for five nights.
Last Modified: 24 May 2013 19:34   
 
Extra police have been called in to help quell protests in Stockholm which are 
now running in to a sixth night [AFP] 
Stockholm police called in reinforcements from across Sweden to quell a 
possible sixth straight night of riots in the 
country's capital.
The nightly unrest led Britain's Foreign Office and the United States embassy 
on Friday to warn their nationals against travelling to the 
affected areas.
"We will be getting reinforcements from Gothenburg and Malmoe 
tonight," police spokesman Kjell Lindgren said, naming the country's 
next two largest cities.
Parents and volunteer organisations who have patrolled the streets in recent 
nights have helped decrease the intensity of the unrest, 
Lindgren said.
No information about the specific number of police due to arrive was revealed.
The fifth night of violence on Thursday resulted in 30 cars being 
torched and a primary school being set ablaze in Kista, an area that is 
known as Sweden's IT hub.
The 94 students will move into improvised classrooms in nearby office buildings 
from Monday.
"Five nights in a row - it's incomprehensible," said Faisal Lugh, whose two 
children are pupils at the school.
"My children asked about the things they had there: 'How about my books? My 
rain jacket? My pictures? Are they all
gone?'" said Lugh, who works for an unemployment office and often helps new 
immigrants find jobs.
Fault line
Eight people, mostly in their early 20s, were arrested during the 
night. Youth unemployment is especially high in immigrant neighbourhoods like 
the ones where the riots have taken place.
The trouble began in the suburb of Husby, where 80 percent of 
inhabitants are immigrants, triggered by the fatal police shooting of a 
69-year-old Portuguese immigrant last week after the man wielded a large knife 
in public.
The unrest has also sparked a debate among Swedes over the 
integration of immigrants, many of whom arrived under the country's 
generous asylum policies, and who now make up about 15 percent of the 
population.
A fault-line has been exposed between a well-off majority and a 
minority, often young people with immigrant backgrounds, who are poorly 
educated, cannot find work and feel pushed to the edge of society.
Due to its liberal immigration policy, Sweden has in recent decades 
become one of Europe's top destinations for immigrants, both in absolute 
numbers and relative to its size.
Many of those who have arrived struggle to learn the language and find 
employment, despite numerous government programmes.  
 
Source: 
Agencies  

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