Sweden to ban travel for the purpose of fighting for IS

Published August 28, 2015
European fighters, like the British "Jihadi John" pictured here, make up a substantial number of IS fighters in Iraq and Syria. — Reuters/File Photo
European fighters, like the British "Jihadi John" pictured here, make up a substantial number of IS fighters in Iraq and Syria. — Reuters/File Photo

STOCKHOLM: Sweden will ban travel for the purpose of committing terrorist acts and tighten laws on taking part in training camps and terrorism funding, the government said on Friday.

In a signed article in daily Dagens Nyheter, Minister for Home Affairs Anders Ygeman said the measures would be introduced this autumn as part of a wider effort to counter radicalisation.

Ygeman said around 250-300 people had travelled from Sweden to Syria or Iraq to join Daesh or the self-styled Islamic State, a hardline Sunni militant group which controls large parts of both countries.

“The security police point to an enhanced knowledge of and potential to commit terrorist acts here too, when and if these people return,” Ygeman said. “Therefore, we must make travel for terrorist purposes illegal, take pre-emptive and preventative measures and make acts of terror more difficult to commit.”

Ygeman also said that Sweden is stepping up efforts to help local authorities counteract radicalisation, such as setting up a hotline for those worried that relatives may be planning to travel abroad to fight.

Further measures will be announced, Ygeman said.

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