Firefighters work to extinguish a fire that broke out early in the morning at
an accommodation for asylum seekers, near Munkedal in Sweden October 20, 2015.
© Adam Ihse / TT News Agency / Reuters
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Firefighters in southern
Sweden have doused the flames at yet another temporary facility for refugees
and migrants. The fifth in a series of suspected arson attacks in the last two
weeks comes despite tight security and secrecy over their locations. Teams from three fire stations have been deployed
to extinguish the blaze at a former retirement home in Oderljunga, being
prepared to become a temporary asylum for refugees, The Local reports. The fire
alarm at the facility went off at about 2:40 a.m. local time, regional
newspaper Sydsvenskan reported.
The
firefighters were able to put out fire almost immediately and save the
building, which suffered only slight damage from the water that was poured on
it and the smell of smoke that saturated the installation.
RT report continues:
There
were no asylum seekers inside and no one was hurt in the incident, but several
firemen told Swedish broadcaster SVT they were positive the fire at the former
retirement home was a deliberate attack, linking the fire to a string of
suspected arson attacks targeting refugee installations throughout Sweden in
the last two weeks.
“Based
on what has happened so far in the country and given that the window is broken,
it is easy to suspect that it was planned. But it is a police matter to
investigate the course of the fire,” SVT cited Daniel Sirensjö, the region’s
fire and rescue service control room operator, as saying.
Police
confirmed the case is being investigated as a possible arson attack.
The
latest figures from Sweden's Migration Board suggest that some 10,000 refugees
have arrived in the Nordic nation since the beginning of the year – about twice
as many as in the previous highest year, in 1992.
It
appears that some locals not only disagree with Stockholm’s policies toward
asylum seekers, but are taking illegal actions in an attempt to destroy places
that could accommodate foreigners.
The
previous four suspected arsons at facilities intended to house asylum seekers
includes one last week, where an old school building was seriously damaged in
Onsala, south of Gothenburg, and the burning down of two more buildings
designated as shelters in southern Sweden’s Ljungby and Arlöv. The refugee
center in Upplands Väsby, north of Stockholm, was damaged by fire on Tuesday
night.
All
the buildings were apparently set on fire on the eve of opening their doors to
migrants and refugees, who have come to Sweden from countries in the Middle
East and North Africa devastated by domestic conflicts and outside
interventions.
Swedish
authorities say that, in view of the suspected arsonists’ tactics, they are
keeping secret the exact plans to welcome new groups of asylum seekers for fear
of new attacks. However, so far the locations of some centers are apparently
being discovered or leaked, with 14 suspected arson attacks on refugee centers
in Sweden since the start of the year.
Security
measures at other refugee centers have been tightened, while the authorities
claim there is a limit to a number of refugees that Sweden can accept.
“Sweden
is approaching the limit of its [refugee] capacity,” Swedish Prime Minister
Stefan Löfven said this week.
Sweden
is currently the European country that hosts the most refugees in proportion to
its population.
In Germany, where protests
against the unprecedented influx of refugees have swept the country in the last
couple of years, police are also investigating alleged cases of arson targeting
buildings supposed to accommodate asylum seekers.
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