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Swedish artist threatened over Prophet Mohammed cartoon killed in car crash

Swedish cartoonist Lars Vilks, who lived under police protection after his 2007 depiction of the Prophet Mohammed prompted death threats, died Sunday in a car accident.

Swedish artist Lars Vilks, known for his drawing of the prophet Mohammed, is awarded with the Danish freedom of the press award in Copenhagen, on March 13, 2015.
Swedish artist Lars Vilks, known for his drawing of the prophet Mohammed, is awarded with the Danish freedom of the press award in Copenhagen, on March 13, 2015. © David Leth Williams, AFP (file photo)
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The 75-year-old and two police officers were killed in a collision with an oncoming truck, Swedish police confirmed to AFP.

“This is being investigated like any other road accident. Because two policemen were involved, an investigation has been assigned to a special section of the prosecutor’s office,” a police spokesperson told AFP, adding that there was no suspicion of foul play.

The accident occurred near the small town Markaryd when the car Vilks was travelling in crashed into an oncoming truck. Both vehicles caught fire and the truck driver was hospitalised, according to police.

In a statement, the police said the cause of the accident was unclear.

>>READ MORE: Exclusive: 'Copenhagen attacks will not scare me', cartoonist Vilks says

“The person we were protecting and two colleagues died in this inconceivable and terribly sad tragedy,” said regional police head Carina Persson.

Vilks had been under police protection since his 2007 cartoon of Mohammed with a dog’s body prompted outrage among those who consider depictions of the Muslim prophet deeply offensive or blasphemous.

Al-Qaeda offered a $100,000 reward for Vilks’ murder.

The depiction also sparked diplomatic friction, with Sweden’s then prime minister Fredrik Reinfeldt meeting ambassadors from several Muslim countries to ease tensions.

In 2015, Vilks survived a gun attack at a free-speech conference in Copenhagen that left a Danish film director dead.

(AFP)

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