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Swedish PM condemns mock hanging of Erdoğan effigy

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Sweden’s prime minister on Friday condemned a Kurdish group in Stockholm for hanging an effigy of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan showing him dangling by his legs from a rope, Agence France-Presse reported.

The staging of a “type of mock execution of a foreign democratically elected leader” was “extremely serious,” Ulf Kristersson told broadcaster TV4.

Turkey summoned Sweden’s ambassador in Ankara on Thursday after the Kurdish Rojava Committee of Sweden compared Erdoğan to Italy’s late dictator Benito Mussolini.

The Fascist ruler was hung upside down after his execution in the closing days of World War II.

“History shows how dictators end up,” the group wrote on Twitter, accompanied by a video showing pictures of Mussolini’s 1945 execution and then a dummy painted to look like Erdoğan swinging on a rope outside Stockholm’s City Hall.

Kristersson said the stunt was even more serious given that Sweden has seen two of its leading politicians assassinated.

Then-prime minister Olof Palme was shot and killed in 1986 and Swedish foreign minister Anna Lindh was fatally stabbed in 2003.

Kristersson said the group’s move was intended as “sabotage against Sweden’s NATO application.”

“It is dangerous for Sweden’s security to act in this way,” he added.

The incendiary tweet came as Turkey piles pressure on Sweden and fellow NATO hopeful Finland to clamp down on Kurdish groups it views as “terrorists.”

Sweden has a larger Kurdish diaspora and a bigger dispute with Turkey.

Ankara has dug in its heels during protracted negotiations that hinge on the extent to which Sweden is ready to meet Turkey’s demand to extradite Kurdish and other political dissidents and prosecute groups such as the Rojava Committee.

Meanwhile, one of Erdoğan’s lawyers, Hüseyin Aydın, announced on Twitter on Friday that he had filed criminal complaints on behalf of Erdoğan at the Ankara Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office against the perpetrators of the incident in Stockholm.

Aydın accused the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) of organizing the controversial protest.

The PKK, which has been waging a bloody war in Turkey’s southeast since 1984, is listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey and much of the international community.

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