http://news.yahoo.com/tensions-rise-...044709934.html
yep. Sweden's 
really fed up. 
Tensions rise in Sweden after killing of asylum centre worker
Stockholm (AFP) - Masked men chased migrants in Stockholm this weekend  in a rare act of overt violence against refugees, but one that reflects  smouldering tensions in Sweden as it grapples with the consequences of a  record influx of migrants.
The attack came just days after a teenaged asylum-seeker killed a young woman working at an asylum residence.
These PIGS kill the very people trying to help them. fine religion Islam is? 
Sweden is figuring it out. only one way to fight "old school religion" .. eye for an eye ..
Between 50 and 100 masked and hooded men chased and reportedly beat up  "people of foreign appearance" on Friday evening at the Sergels Torg  plaza in the heart of the city and handed out leaflets calling for "the  street children of North Africa to get the punishment they deserve".
Police swiftly chased off the assailants, but footage of the racist  attack shocked many Swedes as they struggle with conflicting emotions  regarding the flood of arrivals.
On the one hand there is a deep-rooted, longstanding sense of humanity and willingness to give refuge to those in need.
While on the other, there is a grim realisation that the country's  infrastructure is overwhelmed after welcoming more migrants per capita  than any other European Union country in 2015.
"What is going on in Sweden?" asked daily Expressen on Sunday, listing a  growing number of issues linked to migrants, including arson attacks on  asylum residency centres and cultural as well as religious tensions.
On both the left and right wings, the Swedish media have squarely placed  the blame on Prime Minister Stefan Lofven -- a Social Democrat whose  party has hit record lows in the polls -- accusing him of downplaying  the challenges facing the country.
"Those who dared discuss the link between the number of (migrant)  arrivals and the capacity to welcome and integrate them were accused of  painting a pessimistic picture and playing into the hands of the  far-right," the centre-right daily Svenska Dagbladet wrote last autumn.
- 'Never thought this was possible' -
But in an editorial on January 26, the newspaper called for migrants who  commit crimes to be expelled -- a proposal published the day after the  fatal stabbing of Alexandra Mezher, a 22-year-old asylum centre social  worker.
Mezher, of 
Lebanese origin, was knifed by a 15-year-old boy as she tried  to break up a fight in a centre for unaccompanied minors where she  worked in Molndal, a suburb of Gothenburg in southwestern Sweden.
you see? these pigs murder their own kind and care not about it! because the Koran (sic) tells them to! 
We would never have thought this was possible in Sweden. We hold the  government and the prime minister responsible," the victim's uncle told  AFP.
Lofven responded quickly, visiting the scene hours after the killing, but his reaction stunned commentators.
"There's no easy solution," the prime minister said, prompting Sweden's  paper of reference Dagens Nyheter to conclude: "Lofven has nothing to  say."
A few days later the government announced it wanted to improve its  efficiency at deporting asylum seekers whose applications are rejected,  estimating that at least 60,000 of the 163,000 who applied in 2015 would  be rejected and expelled.
In 2014 and 2015, Sweden, where 20 percent of the population has foreign  origin, took in 245,000 asylum seekers, more than any other EU country  per capita.
- Dilapidated 'Swedish model' -
The  influx has dwindled to a trickle since Sweden reinstated border checks  in November, but the large number of migrants has pushed the country's  famed "Swedish model" -- a cradle-to-grave welfare state already a  little worse-for-wear -- to the edge.
 Sweden faces acute housing shortages and skyrocketing real estate  prices, salaries so low for teachers and nurses that there are employee  shortages, a lack of nursing homes, and, in a country that prides itself  as an egalitarian society, the fastest growing inequality gap in the  OECD.
Burdened further by the migration crisis, the degradation of the welfare  state has left some Swedes with a sense of "paradise lost", fuelling  the frustrations of society's weakest members.
"The country has changed a lot. It used to be a quiet place but now all  you hear about is violence and attacks," Eva, a pensioner from the town  of Boras where Alexandra Mezher lived, told AFP.
Obsessed by the "image Sweden has of itself as a big moral power" on the  international scene, "the left has (over the years) forgotten Sweden's  domestic needs and has as a result left the door wide open for the  Sweden Democrats", the far-right party represented in parliament,  historian Lars Tragardh told AFP.
The party has officially distanced itself from the racist and violent  neo-Nazi movements that were active during the 1990s when Sweden opened  its doors to refugees from the Balkans war.
Authorities now fear a resurgence of those groups.
Intelligence  service Sapo suspects them of recruiting members among football  hooligans, as appears to have been the case in Friday's migrant attacks.
nternet site Nordfront, run by the neo-Nazi movement SMR, confirmed that  around "a hundred hooligans" from the AIK and Djurgarden clubs were  involved in the attacks.
At an anti-migrant demonstration in Stockholm attended by around 200  people, several protesters were also seen wearing team colours.