STOCKHOLM, Dec 15: Swedish intelligence agency Saepo said on Wednesday there were around 200 violence-promoting Islamic extremists in Sweden, days after the country's first-ever suicide bombing missed wreaking havoc among Christmas shoppers.

Some “80 per cent of the 200 can be linked to each other,” Malena Rembe, the chief analyst at Saepo's Counter-Terrorism Unit told reporters, adding they were not part of one big network.

“The radicalisation happens in Sweden,” but “the concrete threat is mainly directed at people in other countries,” Rembe said, explaining that most of the violence-promoting extremists were men between the ages of 15 and 30.

The man suspected to have carried out this weekend's bombing was not among the 200 extremists the agency knows about, she said.

“Most of these networks focus on action and propaganda against foreign troops in Muslim countries and against governments they see as corrupt and not representing what networks consider to be the only true interpretation of Islam,” Saepo said.It explained in its 126-page report, which was commissioned by the government before the weekend's suicide attack, that the extremists focus on areas such as Somalia, Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The agency stressed the 200 or so extremists were “not a threat to the fundamental structures of society, Sweden's democratic system or central government.”

The report comes days after Sweden's first-ever suicide bombing on Saturday, carried out by a man strongly believed to have been Taimour Abdulwahab, who until recently had been living in Britain.—AFP

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