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Sweden locks up Turkish man over attempted terrorist financing of PKK

AFP/The Local
AFP/The Local - [email protected]
Sweden locks up Turkish man over attempted terrorist financing of PKK
The trial was held at Stockholm District Court. Photo: Oscar Olsson/TT

A Swedish court has jailed a Turkish citizen for attempted terrorist financing for the pro-Kurdish PKK, the first conviction of its kind in the Nordic country, which is seeking Turkey's approval to join Nato.

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The man, described by the court as a Kurdish man with roots in Turkey, was also found guilty of attempted aggravated extortion and a firearms offence, the Stockholm district court said in a statement.

It added that the man, in his 40s, would be given a four-and-a-half-year prison sentence, and that he would be deported upon his release.

He was arrested in January after making threats and firing a gun outside a restaurant in Stockholm.

"The district court sentences a Kurdish man of Turkish origin for attempting to extort a Kurdish businessman in Stockholm at gunpoint to pay money to the PKK," judge Måns Wigén said in a statement.

"The attempted extortion took place within the framework of an extensive fundraising programme conducted by the PKK in Europe, including through extortion," Wigén said.

According to the court, the investigation had found that the goal of the extortion attempt was for a plaintiff to "hand over money to the PKK".

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Ilhan Aydin, the man's lawyer, told AFP his client would appeal the verdict.

"He is disappointed with the outcome and we do not share the district court's judgement, particularly in the areas of terrorist financing and attempted aggravated extortion," Aydin said.

Turkey, which is blocking Sweden's Nato bid, has accused the Scandinavian country of being a haven for "terrorists", especially members of the PKK, and has asked Stockholm to extradite dozens of people.

Wigén stressed that the Nato application had not affected the district court's ruling.

Sweden tightened its anti-terrorism legislation in July last year, making it easier to prosecute financing activities for terrorist organisations.

This is the first time that the new law, already used in cases linked to the Islamic State organisation, has been used against an alleged PKK supporter.

Ending two centuries of neutrality and military non-alignment, Sweden and neighbouring Finland announced bids to join Nato in May last year after Russia invaded Ukraine.

Turkey and Hungary are the only Nato member states yet to ratify the Sweden's bid, which requires unanimous approval.

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