Source: AFP
52 hurt, 100 detained in clashes at Eritrean Stockholm festival
Thu, 3 August 2023 at 6:51 pm BST·2-min read
More than 50 people were injured and dozens detained in Stockholm Thursday as clashes broke out at an Eritrean pro-government festival, police and health officials said, with anti-government protesters trashing property at the site.
“Another public gathering took place close to the festival site, during which a violent riot broke out,” police said, adding in a statement they had detained “around a hundred people”.
Police said they remained at the scene in a suburb northwest of Stockholm and were “continuing their efforts to disrupt criminal acts and restore order.”
They said they had also opened an investigation into violent rioting and arson as well as obstructing the work of police and rescue services.
Around 1,000 anti-government demonstrators authorised to hold a protest nearby broke through a police barrier as they stormed the festival, the tabloid Expressen reported.
They tore down festival tents, using tent spikes as weapons against police and throwing stones at officers, the paper said.
Police said at least 52 people had required medical attention, either at the scene or at local clinics and hospitals.
By 7:00 pm (1500 GMT), 15 people had been taken to hospital, regional healthcare authority Region Stockholm said in a separate statement.
Eight of them had “serious injuries,” with the other seven sustaining “minor injuries,” according to the authority, which added it had multiple units at the scene.
“It is a complicated and extensive operation. There are a lot of people in motion at the site and the total number of injuries is still unclear,” Patrik Soderberg, chief physician at Region Stockholm, said.
Footage from the scene showed cars and at least one tent on fire, sending large clouds of black smoke into the air.
Police shut down a section of the nearby E18 motorway in both directions as people fleeing the scene blocked the road.
The Eritrea-Scandinavia festival, which has been held for many years, features seminars, debates and lectures, as well as music, a bazaar and a fairground.
It is scheduled to run from Thursday to Sunday.




I’m no friend of the Eritrean regime, I can understand the frustration and the anger of the protesters. Imagine fleeing an inhuman, brutal dictatorship, leaving everything you love behind, knowing you will never be able to return, making it all the way to Europe under the most adverse conditions imaginable and then being confronted with said dictatorship proudly celebrating itsself in your place of refuge. It would make anyone want to pick up few stones.
However, I am also European, German to be precise and I am fully aware and understand that 99% of the European population only see refugees bringing their conflicts with them to Europe and causing loads of trouble. Last time I looked the far-right party AfD had 22% approval ratings in polls in Germany, with new record highs almost on a weekly basis. It worries me no end and violent protests at an Eritrea festival, be it in Giessen or Stockholm won’t do anything to reverse this trend, not only in Germany.