- Associated Press - Sunday, December 12, 2010

STOCKHOLM | No one died except for the likely bomber, but two explosions in Sweden’s capital tore at the fabric of this tolerant and open nation — a society that hadn’t seen a terrorist attack in more than three decades.

Two people were wounded in central Stockholm on Saturday in what appeared to be the first suicide bombing in the history of Sweden, which has been spared the major terrorist strikes seen in several other European countries.

A car exploded in the middle of the seasonal shopping frenzy, shooting flames and causing several smaller blasts as people ran screaming from the scene. The blast that killed the bomber came moments later a few blocks away from the car explosion on a busy pedestrian street.

Experts said the bomber probably didn’t succeed in detonating all the explosives and could have caused much greater damage.

While police haven’t confirmed Saturday’s attack was motivated by Islamist views, an audio file sent to Swedish news agency TT shortly before the blast referred to jihad, Sweden’s military presence in Afghanistan and a cartoon by a Swedish artist that depicted the Prophet Muhammad as a dog, enraging the Muslim world.

It hasn’t been verified that the speaker is the person who set off the explosive, but police have said they are investigating that possibility.

“Now the Islamic state has been created. We now exist here in Europe and in Sweden. We are a reality,” the voice said in the file, submitted to the Associated Press by TT. “I don’t want to say more about this. Our actions will speak for themselves.”

Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt said Sunday the attack was “unacceptable” but urged Swedes not to jump to “premature conclusions” that “create tension which paints pictures that are then difficult to change.”

“Sweden is an open society … which has stated a wish that people should be able to have different backgrounds, believe in different in gods … and live side by side in our open society,” Mr. Reinfeldt said at a news conference.

Swedes, with a tradition of welcoming immigrants and a culture of transparency, began questioning the veracity of their self-image of being a secure nation after the 1986 murder of Prime Minister Olaf Palme. In 2003, the fatal stabbing of Foreign Minister Anna Lindh in an department store was a wake-up call for many.

But there has been no major terrorist strike.

“We had a terrorist attack in the 1970s from the Rote Armee Friktion of Germany, but if this is a suicide bomber it is the first time in Sweden,” security police spokesman Anders Thornberg told the Associated Press. “It’s very serious and it’s very tragic that these things have come to Sweden, too.”

On Sunday, the pedestrian district where the explosions occurred was eerily quiet and empty for a mid-December weekend.

In October, Sweden raised its terror threat alert level from low to elevated because of what police called “a shift in activities” among Swedish-based groups that could be plotting attacks.

Days later, police made several arrests over an alleged bomb plot in the country’s second-largest city, Goteborg. The suspects were later released, and police said the city was no longer deemed to be under threat.

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