Sweden expels imams and associates, citing radicalisation concerns It is not clear that the men will be deported as they risk persecution in their home countries

(National-UAE) Sweden has decided to expel six detained Muslim extremists from the Scandinavian country who “contribute to Islamist radicalisation and pose threats to the security of the kingdom.”

The six men, who are described by the government as central figures in the radical Islamist environment, were taken into custody during the Security Police offensive last spring.

They include Gävle mosque’s imam Abo Raad and his 34-year-old son Raad Al-Duhan, as well as four others with connection to the imam [who] have been detained for six months. Both are Iraqi and immigrated to Sweden [in] 1997 and 1998, respectively.

They also include an Iraqi imam in the eastern city of Umeå, who immigrated to Sweden in 1998, and a Russian resident of Gävle, who according to his own information was [a] former imam in his home country before he immigrated to Sweden in 2011.

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