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Stockholm shooting victim ‘completely innocent’ say distraught family

A man in his late 30s who was shot dead as he cycled with his son to the local swimming pool was 'competely innocent', with no criminal links, his brother-in-law has told Swedish television.

Stockholm shooting victim 'completely innocent' say distraught family
A policeman walks near an area cordoned off due to Wednesday night's shooting in Skärholmen. Photo: Oscar Olsson/TT

The brother-in-law told the Swedish public broadcaster SVT that the man had been cycling through an underpass in Stockholm suburb Skärholmen when a group of young men began to shout at him. When he turned back — presumably to tell them off — he was shot in the face, with his young son then having to ring the police and get help.   “It’s incomprehensible. It’s hard to take in,” the brother-in-law said. “We know what happened but I don’t think we’ve really absorbed it properly yet.”  

He stressed that his brother-in-law had never to his knowledge had anything to do with criminal groups, and was, he believed, “completely innocent”.

“The only thing he lived for was his son, and as I said they were on their way to the swimming pool and instead of it being a pleasant experience his son witnessed him being shot in the face.”  

Sweden’s prime minister, called the murder “absolutely horrific”, in a written comment passed to the TT newswire.  

“My thoughts are with the victim, the little guy and their relatives.” 

Jimmie Åkesson, leader of the far-right Sweden Democrats, said that the killing showed it was long overdue for Sweden to “declare outright war” on criminal gangs. 

“It is not good enough to just belch out platitudes, it’s time for Sweden to declare full-scale war against every single individual in these criminal gangs,” he wrote. 

The opposition Social Democrats called for the government to work together with the opposition parties to bring in additional measures to combat gang shootings.  

“This is a brutal reminder that we will not end this with the measures that have been taken so far,” Ardalan Shekarabi, the party’s justice spokesperson told TT. “I think it is very important that we think in new ways and work together. We will not just solve gang crime through simply proposing new laws.” 

The killing was the latest in a series of shootings to take place in Skärholmen over the past month, with a man in his 20s shot dead on March 1st and a man in his mid-20s injured on March 13th.

As the victim did not have a criminal record, police are reportedly treating the shooting as a case of mistaken identity. 

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POLICE

‘It is very serious’: Swedish PM vows to act after claims of police leaks to gangs

Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson expressed concern of reports in newspaper Dagens Nyheter of police employees dating and leaking information to gang members.

'It is very serious': Swedish PM vows to act after claims of police leaks to gangs

Sweden has struggled to contain a surge in violence in recent years as criminal gangs feud for control of drug markets, with bombings and shootings recorded weekly.

Kristersson’s comments followed a report by newspaper Dagens Nyheter (DN) that claimed to have found multiple instances of police employees leaking sensitive information about ongoing investigations to criminals.

In some cases, the police employees allegedly were in intimate relationships with gang members to whom they leaked information.

According to DN, which published the report over the weekend, in four cases the leaks – which included information about enemies of the gang member involved in the relationship – preceded revenge attacks, including murders.

At least 30 employees had for different reasons been considered “security risks” and either resigned or were forced to quit, the newspaper reported.

DN said that in several cases, criminals had begun “sexual relations with strategically selected police officers”.

Kristersson on Monday told news agency TT that it was “very concerning information”.

“There are many great risks and one is that trust in police declines, that one gets the idea that mafia-like methods are used to infiltrate law enforcement,” the head of government said.

“It is very serious and we need to address it,” he continued.

Kristersson said that purely based on the initial report he could not say whether it constituted a threat to national security or not.

“But the mere suspicion of these types of connections are damaging,” he told the news agency.

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