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TODAY IN SWEDEN

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

Two men locked up over murder that sparked Sweden's brutal gang war, Swedish soldiers stayed in Russian-owned cottages, and Klarna fined 1.1 million kronor over night shifts. Here's the latest news.

Today in Sweden: A roundup of the latest news on Tuesday
File photo of Uppsala District Court, where two men were found guilty of murder. Photo: Stina Stjernkvist/TT

Two men locked up over murder of gang criminal’s mother

Two young men have been convicted of murdering the mother of a leading gang member, a shooting that sparked a bloody gang war in Sweden last winter. Uppsala district court sentenced a Yahia Ali Ibrahim, 20, to life in jail and a 16-year-old to four years in juvenile detention.

“The murder resembles an execution, and sparked a chain of violent retaliation,” judge Jenny Forkman said in a statement.

According to the district court, it’s been confirmed that the 20-year-old held the gun when the woman – in her 60s with no criminal record – was shot dead in her home in Uppsala. But the younger boy participated so actively that the court handed him, too, a murder conviction.

If he had been 18 years old he would also have been locked up for life, said Forkman.

Both men denied the charges.

Swedish vocabulary: a district court – en tingsrätt

Swedish soldiers stayed in Russian-owned cottages

The Swedish Armed Forces during the latest Nato exercise in northern Norway rented cottages owned by Russian politicians with links to the Kremlin, they have confirmed after a reports by Norwegian broadcaster TV2. The Norwegian military also rented the cottages. 

A representative of the holiday village told TV4 on Sunday that the Swedish Armed Forces rented two cottages with 32 beds in total for two weeks in March. The Armed Forces confirm that soldiers lived in the cottages for a short period of time during the Nordic Response exercise.

A spokesperson told Swedish news agency TT that they didn’t know who owned the cottages.

“No of course not. We wouldn’t have booked them. It’s incredibly unfortunate that this has happened,” Sofia Kalmeborg told TT.

“It’s not good at all. That’s Swedish tax money in Russian pockets.”

She said they however didn’t believe that there had been any breach of security as a result of staying in the cottages.

Swedish vocabulary: a cottage – en stuga

Klarna fined 1.1 million kronor over night shifts

Upholding a decision by Sweden’s Work Environment Authority, an administrative court has told fintech giant Klarna to pay a fine of 1.1 million kronor for asking some staff to work night shifts, reports DI Digital

In Sweden, employees are by law entitled to at least 11 consecutive non-work hours every day, and the hours between midnight and 5am must be included in that, so that staff are able to get their rest.

Exceptions can be made for vital services such as hospitals or businesses that can’t stop running at night, or businesses with a collective bargaining agreement, which in many cases allow for night shifts but which Klarna didn’t have at the time.

A wide range of businesses have in the past been told not to work night shifts, including Spotify and a strip club.

“We have received and are analysing the administrative court’s verdict which refers to the period of 2021 and 2022. Klarna has from there onwards had an exemption from the Work Environment Authority for night work, which solves the basic issue for the future,” a press officer told TT.

Swedish vocabulary: administrative court – förvaltningsrätt

Sweden to ramp up drive to retain foreign students and researchers

The government has tasked a new inquiry with figuring out how to make Sweden a more attractive destination for foreign students, doctoral students and researchers – while cracking down on permit cheats.

Forty-one percent of people who started doctoral studies in Sweden in 2022 were foreigners, rising to 63 percent in natural sciences, the government said as it announced the inquiry on Monday.

The inquiry is supposed to analyse whether Sweden’s migration rules are fit for the purpose of attracting and retaining foreign researchers and propose measures to make it easier for them to stay, amid concerns that too many talents leave the country after finishing their studies.

The inquiry will also suggest ways of clamping down on foreigners who abuse the system. In a report in 2022, the Migration Agency found that a large number of people use their student permit as an easier way of moving to Sweden to work, instead of applying for a work permit.

Swedish vocabulary: an inquiry – en utredning

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TODAY IN SWEDEN

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

Man and woman die in ferry accident, Green Party elects former Culture Minister Amanda Lind as new co-leader, and two teenagers convicted of attacks on sex workers. Here's the latest news from Sweden.

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

Man and woman die in ferry accident

A man and a woman in their mid-70s died after driving off a ferry near Norrtälje, north-east of Stockholm.

The car is said to have driven onto the ferry between Furusund and Yxlan in the Stockholm archipelago late on Sunday afternoon, but didn’t stop to park and instead kept going through to the other side, driving straight through the gate and into the water, according to witnesses.

Ambulance, an ambulance helicopter and boats were dispatched to the scene, including divers. Around an hour after they fell into the water, the pair were found and taken to hospital, where they were confirmed dead. It is not yet known why the car didn’t stop on the ferry.

The car is set to be salvaged on Monday.

Swedish vocabulary: a car – en bil

Green Party elects former culture minister as new co-leader

The Swedish Green Party on Sunday elected Amanda Lind as their new co-leader, as expected.

She will replace Märta Stenevi alongside Daniel Helldén.

Lind served as Sweden’s culture minister between January 2019 until the Green Party left the government in November 2021, and was party secretary between 2016 and 2019.

Earlier this spring, Lind beat the party’s finance spokesperson, Janine Alm Ericson, and the party’s parliamentary group leader, Annika Hirvonen, to win the party’s election committee’s backing.

In a press release announcing its choice, the committee praised Lind’s “ability to communicate a vision and at the same time connect that to current political issues”, adding that her “particular experience in cultural issues” meant that she “fitted extremely well” with the party’s other leader Daniel Helldén who is more focused on issues like carbon emissions, energy, transport, and the green industrial transformation. 

Swedish vocabulary: to be elected – att bli vald

Two teenagers convicted of attacks on sex workers

Two teenagers have been sentenced for attacking people selling sex in Stockholm.

A 16-year-old boy arranged a meeting with a man in December 2023 to buy sex. When he arrived at the apartment, the man told him he was too young and asked him to leave, reports Swedish news agency TT. But the boy instead raped the man at knifepoint, and took the man’s rings and 10,000 kronor in cash, according to the verdict by Södertörn District Court.

The following day he arranged a similar meeting with a woman. He brought an 18-year-old friend to her place and they both bought sex from her. When they were set to leave, they tied her hands and feet and forced her to give them the equivalent of around 30,000 kronor. 

The 18-year-old admitted to the robbery, but the 16-year-old denied the charges. However, his DNA was found at the scene.

The court sentenced the 18-year-old to three years in jail and deportation for robbery and buying sex. The 16-year-old was found guilty of aggravated rape, buying sex, and two counts of robbery, and was sentenced to a year and three months in juvenile detention. If he had been at least 18, he would instead have been sentenced to more than seven years in jail, reports TT.

Police have previously warned that attacks on sex workers are becoming more frequent.

Swedish vocabulary: juvenile detention – sluten ungdomsvård

2,000 people protest against attack on anti-fascism meeting

More than 2,000 people gathered on Saturday for a demonstration outside a theatre in Gubbängen in southern Stockholm, where alleged Nazis last week violently attacked an anti-fascism meeting organised by the Left Party and Green Party and set off smoke bombs.

“It was an act of terror and that is something we can never accept,” TT quoted member of parliament Amanda Lind (then not yet Green Party leader) as saying. 

Left Party leader Nooshi Dadgostar and Social Democrat leader Magdalena Andersson also spoke at the demonstration. Dadgostar urged Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson, who leads Sweden’s right-wing government, to call a meeting with party leaders to address the threat of political violence in the run-up to the EU elections this summer. Kristersson has previously vowed to speak with party leaders.

In the attack on the Gubbängen event last week, the assailants – described as Nazis by anti-extremism magazine Expo – let off smoke grenades and assaulted several people, three of whom were taken to hospital. Police have at the time of writing not arrested any suspects.

Swedish vocabulary: gathered – samlades

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