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TODAY IN SWEDEN

Today in Sweden: A roundup of the latest news on Thursday

'Sensational' silver treasure hoard found on Swedish island, diplomatic immunity protects driver who abandoned car on Stockholm railway, and getting a Swedish passport is about to become more expensive. Here's the latest news.

Today in Sweden: A roundup of the latest news on Thursday
Archaeologists Kristina Jansson and Anna Ödéen, who found a large collection of silver treasure on a Swedish island. Photo: Åsa Rosén/Jönköpings Läns Museum

‘Sensational’ silver treasure hoard found at Swedish church

Two skeletons and a rare silver treasure hoard were recently found during an archaeological examination of the ground at the Brahe Church on Visingsö, an island in Lake Vättern north of Jönköping, conducted before workers were supposed to install pipes for geothermal heating.

A total of 170 so-called silver bracteates were found in the grave, next to the left foot of one of the skeletons. Their existence was previously unknown and they are thought to be from the years 1150 to 1180, a period from which few similar finds have been made in Sweden. 

“It’s a wholly sensational find which will change the early medieval history of coins in Götaland,” said Eeva Jonsson from Sweden’s Royal Coin Cabinet in a statement. 

It’s not yet known why the person, who appears to have been a man in his early 20s, was buried together with so much treasure. Burying people together with money or other items was common in Sweden in pre-historic times (pre-historic times refer to the time before there were written sources recording history, and in Sweden the era lasted until the 11th century) but was unusual in Christian graves.

Swedish vocabulary: silver coins – silvermynt

Driver of car left on Stockholm railway protected by diplomatic immunity

Police have identified the suspected driver of a van which in early March drove two kilometres along a railway in Stockholm before being abandoned on the tracks, but they have diplomatic immunity and cannot be charged.

The investigation has now been closed, reports the Dagens Nyheter newspaper.

The driver was originally suspected of gross carelessness in traffic, endangering other people and running away from the scene of a traffic accident.

The van belonged to the Ethiopian embassy, which apologised for the incident at the time.

Swedish vocabulary: a driver – en förare

Sweden set to raise the price of passports

From the start of May, the cost of getting a Swedish passport will increase from 400 kronor to 500 kronor.

The government writes in a press statement that the police authority’s passport services are funded by fees, so the price paid by passport applicants is meant to cover the cost of providing them.

Swedish vocabulary: a passport – ett pass

IN STATS: What do new figures tell us about violent crime in Sweden?

With 121 violent homicides recorded, 2023 was the worst year for murder in Sweden since 2020, when 124 people were killed in violent attacks, continuing a rising trend seen since 2021. The number of violent killings was up 4 percent on 2022, when 116 people were killed.

It’s worth pointing out, however, that this is still lower than the 129 people who died of “murder, manslaughter or violent attack” in Sweden back in 1989, when the population was nearly 20 percent lower.

When it comes to the gang shootings that have dominated headlines in Sweden in recent years, there were signs of improvement, with 53 people shot dead in 2023, down from a record 63 in 2022.

As The Local’s Nordic editor Richard Orange reports in this article, however, it’s hardly great news, as 2023 still witnessed the second highest number of deadly shootings ever recorded in Sweden. 

Swedish vocabulary: a murder – ett mord

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TODAY IN SWEDEN

Today in Sweden: A roundup of the latest news on Friday

Healthcare strike under way as Swedish nurses refuse overtime, mortgage giant predicts lower interest rates from next month, and mother no longer suspected of murdering children. Here's the latest news.

Today in Sweden: A roundup of the latest news on Friday

Healthcare strike under way as nurses refuse overtime

A nationwide healthcare strike affecting 63,000 nurses, midwives, biomedical scientists and radiographers is under way, after negotiations between the union and employers’ organisations broke down. 

The industrial action, launched by the Swedish Association of Health Professionals, kicked off at 4pm on Thursday and means that its members will refuse to work overtime or extra shifts, and that employers may not hire new staff as long as the action is ongoing.

Healthcare services are generally urging patients to turn up to scheduled appointments (although as healthcare is managed on a regional basis in Sweden, it may make sense to check with your healthcare provider), but warn that non-essential surgeries may be cancelled.

Test results could also be delayed.

Swedish vocabulary: an overtime ban – en övertidsblockad

Swedish mortgage bank predicts lower interest rate from next month

Sweden’s state-owned mortgage lender SBAB predicts that the Riksbank (the central bank) will lower the interest rate five times this year.

It predicts in its latest report that the first cut will come in May, when it believes the Riksbank will lower the so-called policy rate, the country’s main interest rate, from 4.00 percent to 3.75 percent. And by the end of the year it predicts the rate will be down to 2.75 percent.

If mortgage rates were to also fall by 1.25 percentage units (mortgage rates are influenced by the policy rate, but it’s not a guarantee that they’ll be identical), that means someone paying a 3 million mortgage would have their mortgage rate reduced by 3,125 kronor per month.

Swedish vocabulary: to lower – att sänka 

Swedish PM to meet parties after attack on anti-fascism event

Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson told the Expressen tabloid that the government wants to meet Sweden’s parties, after the Left Party demanded action following an attack on an anti-fascism event co-organised by them.

“The government wants to meet all parties in parliament to discuss how we work together against attacks, harassment and sabotage against political meetings,” Kristersson wrote in a comment to Expressen.

Several masked men, described as Nazis by several present at the scene, burst into a Stockholm theatre on Wednesday night and set off smoke bombs during an anti-fascism event, according to police and participants.

Around 50 people were taking part in the event at the Moment theatre in Gubbängen, a southern suburb of the Swedish capital, organised by the Left Party and the Green Party.

Swedish vocabulary: Left Party – Vänsterpartiet

Mother no longer suspected of murdering children

The mother of two school-age children, a boy and a girl, who were found dead in their beds in Södertälje a couple of days ago, has been released and is no longer a suspect, her lawyer told Swedish media. The father remains in custody on suspicion of murder. 

“It’s an incredibly tragic and sensitive case,” her lawyer, Lina Holmgren, told Swedish news agency TT. 

The prosecutor has until noon on Saturday to decide whether or not to ask the court to remand the father in custody.

The two children were found dead in a home in Södertälje, south of Stockholm, on Wednesday night. The Expressen tabloid reports that a neighbour alerted the police. The father was taken to hospital with serious injuries and his condition is still unknown.

Swedish vocabulary: sensitive – känsligt

Business leaders: Work permit threshold ‘has no place in Swedish labour model’

Sweden’s main business group has attacked a proposal to exempt some jobs from a new minimum salary for work permits, saying it is “unacceptable” political interference in the labour model and risks seriously affecting national competitiveness.

The Confederation of Swedish Enterprise said in its response to the government’s consultation, submitted on Thursday afternoon, that it not only opposed the proposal to raise the minimum salary for a work permit to Sweden’s median salary (currently 34,200 kronor a month), but also opposed plans to exempt some professions from the higher threshold.

“To place barriers in the way of talent recruitment by bringing in a highly political salary threshold in combination with labour market testing is going to worsen the conditions for Swedish enterprise in both the short and the long term, and risks leading to increased fraud and abuse,” the employer’s group said.

The group, which represents businesses across most of Sweden’s industries, has been critical of the plans to further raise the salary threshold for work permits from the start, with the organisation’s deputy director general, Karin Johansson, telling The Local this week that more than half of those affected by the higher threshold would be skilled graduate recruits Swedish businesses sorely need.

Swedish vocabulary: a business – ett företag

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