It was in the evening after a Koran was burned and kicked at Stortorget that a riot broke out at Rosengård.

A film that SVT received from the evening shows a clip when a middle-aged woman stands with a torch in her hand in the middle of a crowd.

They are protesting loudly at the intersection of Amiralsgatan and Scheelegatan.

- The torch symbolizes grief, as a symbol of what happened to the Koran, says "Laila".

We see in the movie that you were aggressive.

Why?

-

It was not just me, everyone got angry.

I have not called on anyone to attack the police.

"Why are the police protecting them?"

No applications to demonstrate against Islam were approved, either from the street artist Dan Park or the Danish far-right politician Rasmus Paludan.

Despite this, several people from his party, Stram Kurs, were in Malmö to express their views against Islam.

When it was discovered, the police blocked off parts of the square.

- We did it for preventive purposes.

An area is lit according to the Police Act if something should happen, Ewa-Gun Westford explains.

The police's way of working on Stortorget was the reason why "Laila" protested at Rosengård.

- How can the police allow them to kick the Koran?

These are the feelings of Muslims.

We also have feelings, says "Laila".

The police want to be safe

Ewa-Gun Westford explains that the police wait a while before arresting them, saying that they want to be sure that they are guilty of a crime.

In this case, incitement against ethnic group.

- It is never defensible to behave as they did at Rosengård last Friday night, never.

I still think putting all the responsibility on the police in this case is to shoot oneself in the foot.

When "Laila" looks back on the event afterwards, she regrets that she went there.

- I could just as easily have stayed at home and shown my anger.

Why did you go there in the first place?

- I did not think it would be that way.

I am completely opposed to the young people destroying.