Mehmet Kaplan | |
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Minister for Housing and Urban Development | |
In office 3 October 2014 – 18 April 2016 |
|
Monarch | Carl XVI Gustaf |
Prime Minister | Stefan Löfven |
Preceded by | Stefan Attefall |
Succeeded by | Per Bolund (acting) |
Member of the Swedish Riksdag for |
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In office 2 October 2006 – 29 September 2014 |
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Personal details | |
Born |
Gaziantep, Turkey |
18 July 1971
Political party | Green Party |
Religion | Sunni Islam |
Mehmet Güner Kaplan (born 18 July 1971) is a Swedish politician of Turkish origin who served as Minister for Housing and Urban Development from 2014 to 2016. He is a member of the Swedish Green Party.
Kaplan resigned from the Cabinet after controversy regarding ties to Islamic extremism. He came under increasing pressure after local media published photos of him at a dinner with Turkish ultranationalists, including the Swedish head of the extremist Grey Wolves organisation, and a former leader of the main Turkish nationalist group in Sweden, who called on Turks to kill Armenians.
Kaplan was born to Turkish family in Gaziantep, Turkey; he migrated to Sweden at age 8.
He was a member of the Riksdag (2006–2014) and before that spokesperson for the Muslim Council of Sweden (2005–2006) and Young Muslims of Sweden (2000–2002). He was also a founding member of the organization Swedish Muslims for Peace and Justice, a Muslim peace movement, as well as a strong supporter of the Swedish peace movement. He was a member of the board of the Green Party between 2003 and 2011.
Kaplan was on board the Ship to Gaza flotilla which tried to protest against the Israeli embargo of the Gaza strip. The Israeli armed forces boarded the flotilla on 31 May 2010 killing 9 flotilla members who resisted their boarding.
On 1 July 2014, in a Fight Racism Now seminar held in Visby, Kaplan compared the young Muslims from Sweden who went to fight for any force in the Syrian civil war (including the Islamic State) with those Swedes who volunteered to fight for Finland against Russia in the Winter War during the Second World War. Kaplan commented that his statements had been misrepresented, but admitted to having chosen his words poorly.