The man who was detained in May this year now has a duty to report to the police since he was released by Säpo, writes Doku, an online newspaper that reports on jihadism and radical Islamism in Sweden.

Säpo did not state any reasons in May about the decisions behind the various detention that took place in Islamist circles in Sweden.

"We never comment on individual persons when it comes to our intelligence work," says Gabriel Wernstedt, press secretary at Säpo when SVT West asked questions about the arrest in May.

It was previously known that the Gävleimamen Abo Raad was deprived of liberty, and which in media reports has been described as strictly Salafist imam.

Appeal deportation decision

It was on July 5 that the Migration Board decided on the expulsion of the West Swedish man. But the man risks persecution in his home country, and therefore Sweden is waiting to enforce the deportation.

The man has appealed the decision, but on September 4, the Migration High Court decided that the repository should release the man but that he should be expelled, Doku writes.

The Migration Supreme Court also writes in the decision that there may be a risk that the man will stay away or carry out criminal activities in Sweden, but that it can no longer "be seen proportionately" to continue to have the man in custody, Doku writes.

The school's activities are unaffected by the arrest

When the man was arrested in May, representatives of the Muslim Free School where the man was a leading profile, could tell that the school's activities could continue as usual.

- This does not affect the school. Everything is rolling on, one of the principals told SVT News West on May 16.

The law on special foreign control - it works