When Morgan Johansson (S) came to Rosengårdsskolan just before lunch, he was met by barrier tape, broken windows, smoke smell and stickers with the text "race risk" on the school's front doors.

There were no students in the fire-damaged part of the school.

Instead, it was the glazier who would make sure that broken windows were replaced after extensive damage and fires the night before the second day of Easter.

- There are 20,000 people living on Rosengård and there are maybe a couple of hundred who behave in this way, says Morgan Johansson after the visit to Rosengård.

Gang criminals are in the background

He thinks it is important to prosecute the people behind this weekend's violent riots in several places in Sweden.

- These are attempted murders, violent riots and blue light sabotage and in the background there are a number of gang criminals that we have had such big problems with, says Morgan Johansson.

He is hopeful about the possibility of identifying and prosecuting the culprits.

- There is extensive filmed material from fixed cameras, drones and uniform cameras that can be used as evidence, says Morgan Johansson.

Could the police have done differently so that it would not be like this?

We will have to evaluate this afterwards, but from what I understand at Rosengård, they have had a good resource.

In Norrköping and Linköping, the municipal directors are appealing to the police to reject Rasmus Paludan's application to once again be allowed to hold demonstrations and burn Korans.

- It is the police who must decide this.

We have a constitutional freedom of expression that is strong and the police must weigh this against maintaining order.