Metro Plus News Swedish appeals court upholds conviction in PKK funding case

Swedish appeals court upholds conviction in PKK funding case

A Swedish appeals court on Wednesday upheld the guilty verdict of a man charged with attempting to finance the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), in a ruling that could affect the likelihood of Turkey ratifying Sweden’s NATO application.
Ankara accuses Sweden of harbouring members of militant groups on its territory and has said it must crack down on them before it can join NATO.
The PKK, deemed a terrorist group by the European Union – to which Sweden belongs – and the United States as well as by Turkey, took up arms against the Turkish state in 1984.
A lower court in July sentenced Yahya Gungor, a Turkish Kurd, to four years and six months in prison followed by deportation for gun crime, attempted extortion and attempted funding of terrorism.
The Svea Court of Appeal found, as the district court had also done, that Gungor had tried to pressure a Kurdish businessman in Stockholm at gunpoint to pay money to the PKK.
In a statement, it said it upheld the Stockholm district court’s verdict apart from the deportation decision, which it annulled.