Sweden calls for vigilance abroad after Quran desecrations, protests

A police officer on a Segway patrols Sweden's parliament Riksdagen in Stockholm, Thursday Aug. 17, 2023. Sweden on Thursday raised its terrorism alert level one notch to the second-highest following recent Quran burnings in the Scandinavian country by a handful of anti-Islam activists, which sparked angry demonstrations in Muslim countries. (Fredrik Sandberg/TT News Agency via AP)

COPENHAGEN, Denmark — A senior Swedish official said Monday that Swedes abroad and businesses linked to Sweden “should observe increased vigilance and caution” following recent Quran burnings in the country and protests in the Muslim world. 

Henrik Landerholm, Sweden’s national security adviser, said there are signs of “a heightened threat” to the country and to Swedish interests abroad, adding the security situation has worsened. 

In a statement, Landerholm said that “representatives of terrorist groups have called for attacks against Sweden. States and other actors have helped amplify such messages.” He said extremists who previously considered Sweden a “legitimate target” now consider it a “priority.”  

Landerholm said there also were “indications” that groups are planning other acts against Swedish interests abroad, and cited the storming of Sweden’s Embassy in Baghdad last month and an attempted attack on the diplomatic mission in Beirut last week. 

A recent string of public Quran desecrations by a handful of anti-Islam activists in Sweden — and more recently in neighboring Denmark — has sparked angry demonstrations in Muslim countries. 

Sweden does not have a law specifically prohibiting the burning or desecration of the Quran or other religious texts. Like many Western countries, it doesn’t have any blasphemy laws; Sweden’s were abandoned in the 1970s. 

Last month, the Scandinavian country’s domestic security service SAPO said the overall security situation has deteriorated and said the risk of terrorism in Sweden remains at an elevated level.