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POLITICS

New ‘Team Sweden’ group to boost Sweden’s global image

Sweden is putting together a new group to boost the country’s international reputation, following a series of disinformation campaigns and Quran burnings which stirred outrage in the Arab world.

New 'Team Sweden' group to boost Sweden's global image
File photo of Swedish flags at a national day celebration in Stockholm. Photo: Pontus Lundahl/TT

Last year, Sweden was named in international media ten times more than the year before, according to the Swedish Institute, a state-run organisation whose job it is to promote the country abroad.

And it was not all positive.

According to the Swedish Institute, in Turkey and Saudi Arabia around 40 percent of all content related to a series of rallies at which activists burned copies of the Quran, reports the Dagens Nyheter (DN) daily.

Simultaneously, a conspiracy campaign falsely claiming that the Swedish social services regularly kidnap Muslim children gained traction and also contributed to a more negative image of the Nordic country in large parts of the Arab world, despite attempts to counter the disinformation.

“We as a government have spent a lot of time on these issues. I myself have made trips to the region to meet political leaders and business people. Last autumn, I probably thought that the consequences for trade would be greater than they were,” Sweden’s Foreign Trade Minister Johan Forssell told DN.

Despite expectations, trade between Sweden and the Middle East increased during this period, but Forsell said action was still needed to strengthen the country’s image.

To do this, he has this week told the Swedish Institute to form a new group called “Team Sweden”, which will focus exclusively on boosting Sweden’s international reputation.

Promoting Sweden as an innovative country, with a particular focus on digitalisation and being an environmentally sustainable economy and society, will be one of the group’s main objectives.

“There’s partly a security component. We know that actors deliberately spread false information that risks having very drastic results,” Forsell told DN.

“And partly we see how many businesses are affected by the Sweden image. These statements can sometimes have direct consequences for their profits and losses,” he added.

The new group will replace parts of the existing Council for the Promotion of Sweden, which is to be discontinued.

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POLITICS

‘Very little debate’ on consequences of Sweden’s crime and migration clampdown

Sweden’s political leaders are putting the population’s well-being at risk by moving the country in a more authoritarian direction, according to a recent report.

'Very little debate' on consequences of Sweden's crime and migration clampdown

The Liberties Rule of Law report shows Sweden backsliding across more areas than any other of the 19 European Union member states monitored, fuelling concerns that the country risks breaching its international human rights obligations, the report says.

“We’ve seen this regression in other countries for a number of years, such as Poland and Hungary, but now we see it also in countries like Sweden,” says John Stauffer, legal director of the human rights organisation Civil Rights Defenders, which co-authored the Swedish section of the report.

The report, compiled by independent civil liberties groups, examines six common challenges facing European Union member states.

Sweden is shown to be regressing in five of these areas: the justice system, media environment, checks and balances, enabling framework for civil society and systemic human rights issues.

The only area where Sweden has not regressed since 2022 is in its anti-corruption framework, where there has been no movement in either a positive or negative direction.

Source: Liberties Rule of Law report

As politicians scramble to combat an escalation in gang crime, laws are being rushed through with too little consideration for basic rights, according to Civil Rights Defenders.

Stauffer cites Sweden’s new stop-and-search zones as a case in point. From April 25th, police in Sweden can temporarily declare any area a “security zone” if there is deemed to be a risk of shootings or explosive attacks stemming from gang conflicts.

Once an area has received this designation, police will be able to search people and cars in the area without any concrete suspicion.

“This is definitely a piece of legislation where we see that it’s problematic from a human rights perspective,” says Stauffer, adding that it “will result in ethnic profiling and discrimination”.

Civil Rights Defenders sought to prevent the new law and will try to challenge it in the courts once it comes into force, Stauffer tells The Local in an interview for the Sweden in Focus Extra podcast

He also notes that victims of racial discrimination at the hands of the Swedish authorities had very little chance of getting a fair hearing as actions by the police or judiciary are “not even covered by the Discrimination Act”.

READ ALSO: ‘Civil rights groups in Sweden can fight this government’s repressive proposals’

Stauffer also expresses concerns that an ongoing migration clampdown risks splitting Sweden into a sort of A and B team, where “the government limits access to rights based on your legal basis for being in the country”.

The report says the government’s migration policies take a “divisive ‘us vs them’ approach, which threatens to increase rather than reduce existing social inequalities and exclude certain groups from becoming part of society”.

Proposals such as the introduction of a requirement for civil servants to report undocumented migrants to the authorities would increase societal mistrust and ultimately weaken the rule of law in Sweden, the report says.

The lack of opposition to the kind of surveillance measures that might previously have sparked an outcry is a major concern, says Stauffer.

Politicians’ consistent depiction of Sweden as a country in crisis “affects the public and creates support for these harsh measures”, says Stauffer. “And there is very little talk and debate about the negative consequences.”

Hear John Stauffer from Civil Rights Defender discuss the Liberties Rule of Law report in the The Local’s Sweden in Focus Extra podcast for Membership+ subscribers.

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