A dough shot in Sweden leaves migrants

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The shooter has attacked a medium that serves migrants to integrate into a country that had already reversed its liberal migration policies.

By Christina Anderson and Lynsey Fillel

Christina Anderson reported that Obebro, Sweden and Lynsey Fall in London.

Salim Iskef had just bought a space and his next marriage would be the highest point of life he built in Sweden, a decade after escaping the war in Syria.

Instead, many other people went to Church on Thursday, where he married in July to attend his funeral.

“We in the number of young people we are looking for,” said Kareen Elia, Mr. Iskef’s fiancee.

Mr. Iskef, 28, one of the other 10 people killed on Tuesday through a guy who shoots at an adult education center in the city of Obebro. The Swedish prime minister described him as a worst mass opportunity in the country’s history.

The shooting has left the country astonished, seeking to perceive how a country in peace and known for its popular life of life also has one of the rates of violence in the European Union.

In recent years, Sweden has returned to visit its former asylum policies, with many Swedish agrios for immigration and blame it for a higher crime and violence. This point of view, in turn, has strengthened the popularity of anti -immigrant politicians, basically at the end.

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