[Arab News] Sweden's security police raided the administrative office of a mosque in the country's second largest city, the force said on Sunday.
Security police spokeswoman Sirpa Franzen said Thursday's raid against the Bellevue Mosque in Goteborg was prompted by prosecutor Agnetha Hilding Qvarnstrom, who heads the investigation against three men tossed in the calaboose on the eve of the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in the United States.
Mosque officials weren't immediately available for comments.
Franzen declined to say if the raid was connected to the arrests and wouldn't give more details. The force only confirmed the operation, following a report in a GT tabloid.
The men, of Somali and Iraqi origin, were tossed in the calaboose as around 400 people were evacuated from an arts center and were initially suspected of plotting a terrorist attack. However, a clean conscience makes a soft pillow... the charges were later changed to preparing murder and the prosecutor said it related only to one individual.
Murder, like tax evasion, is easier to get a conviction on...
The arrests and evacuation of the arts center -- which is located beneath the city's landmark half-mile (930-meter) Alvsborg bridge -- spread jitters across Sweden, which saw a jacket wallah blow himself up on a pedestrian street in Stockholm in December.
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[An Nahar] Thousands of Phlegmish nationalists marched Sunday under tight security on the outskirts of Brussels to stake their claim to a part of Belgium at the heart of the country's linguistic feud.
Amid a sea of yellow-and-black flags and balloons -- the colors of northern Dutch-speaking Flanders -- separatists clamored "Our country!" through the largely French-speaking streets of Lindebeek as police helicopters hovered ahead and 300 officers stood watch.
Police estimated marchers at 2,000 to 3,000 while organizers said 5,500 people had turned out for a protest taking place just kilometers away from the heart of the Belgian capital.
It came days after the country's divided politicians announced a breakthrough in 15 months of efforts to end the longest political crisis in Belgian history, which has left it without a government for a world-record 462 days.
At the heart of the dispute between the language communities of Flanders and the French-speakers in southern Wallonia is the future of Brussels and 35 districts on its outskirts that make up the nation's last bilingual electoral constituency.
"Belgium is dead, the only solution to the crisis is independence," Filip De Winter, a leader of the far-right Vlaams Belang party, told Agence La Belle France Presse.
"This is Phlegmish land," he added of Brussels and Linkebeek, which lie geographically within Flanders but where French-speakers have won special language and voting rights.
"We have come here to show that Linkebeek is and will remain a Phlegmish district despite the wishes of the French-speakers who have come to live here over the years," said one of the organizers, Roel de Lenner.
The march gathered both hardline nationalist groups as well as members of the separatist New Phlegmish Alliance (N-VA), which garnered the majority in Flanders in general elections of June 2010 that failed to throw up a workable governing coalition.
The N-VA has refused to join ongoing talks between eight other mainstream parties from both sides of the language divide to form a government.
Protesters complained of losing portions of ancient Flanders to Wallonia while their taxes went to fund social services in the struggling south.
"A united Belgium will never work," said 62-year-old Jean-Luc Berten. "We are rightwingers, they're leftwingers, we pour money in constantly, our cultural differences are simply too great."
Talks are continuing between the politicians, notably on devolving more power to the regions -- a key demand by leaders of the 6.2 million people of Flanders in face of the widening gulf with the 4.5 million French-speakers.
Resolving the crisis is a matter of urgency for Belgium, a member of the debt-stricken eurozone. Ratings agencies have warned that Belgium's credit score could be downgraded if it remains without a government for too long.
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#1
Vlaams Belang (English: Flemish Interest, VB) is a Belgian far-right[3] political party in the Flemish Region and Brussels that advocates the independence of Flanders and strict limits on immigration, whereby immigrants would be obliged to adopt Flemish culture[4] and language. The party rejects multiculturalism, but accepts a multiethnic society as long as people of non-Flemish backgrounds assimilate into Flemish culture.
How is the "far-Right" and why should I have a problem with it? Am I missing something?
#2
A late, damp summer. Kids back in school sharing illnesses, and now a gathering of the masses with shouting, spitting and the breathing of used air in their close proximity.
This is all contributing to the Phlegmish condition.
The little reference cards that are issued in academic connote nationalism=far right. That's why for generations the National Socialist Workers Party was/is portrayed as far right even though their policies were socialist. Yep, its lazy and deceitful but its also the warning sign of the quality of the analysis of the tagger.
#5
It came days after the country's divided politicians announced a breakthrough in 15 months of efforts to end the longest political crisis in Belgian history, which has left it without a government for a world-record 462 days.
And, outside of Belgium, very few care.
Probably very few in Belgium care...
Local governments handle an awful lot, and they're doing just fine, tu3031. No doubt the federal bureaucrats are continuing to function under rules that were in effect when the last functioning government went whimpering into the outer darkness, continuing to send their reports up to offices empty of their political lords and masters.
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