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TODAY IN SWEDEN

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

Södertälje police chief says stop-and-search zone won't stop violence, record profits for Spotify, British footballer in coma in Gothenburg, and more news from Sweden.

Today in Sweden: A roundup of the latest news on Wednesday
The pro-Gaza protest at Lundagård at the end of April. Photo: Johan Nilsson/TT

Police chief: ‘Stop-and-search zone won’t stop wave of violence’

The Swedish city of Södertälje has been hit by a wave of violence after police lifted the stop-and-search zone imposed earlier this month. But the local police chief Caroline Aspegren hs told TT that a new stop-and-search zone will not bring the violence to an end. 

“The conflict is so complex that it does not only have to do with the geography inside the stop-and-search zone,” she said. 

Only hours after the zone was lifted, shots were fired at a property in the city, and on Monday evening a hand grenade was thrown into a grocery store, but Aspegren said there were no plans to bring back the zones. 

“A stop-and-search zone in itself is not going to bring an end to the ongoing violent conflict. It is one of several different methods we can use to cool down an ongoing conflict.” 

Swedish vocabulary: våldsvågen – a wave of violence

Record profits for Spotify

The music streaming service saw its operating profits rise to €266m, or 3.1bn kronor, between April and June, its highest quarterly profit yet.

The number of subscribers rose 12 percent to 246 million despite the significant staff reductions the company has pushed through in recent years.  

Shares shot up 7.2 percent on the New York Stock Exchange after the announcement.  

Swedish vocabulary: rörelsevinst – operating profit

Nine more people charged for Lund Gaza protests

Nine new protesters have been charged on suspicion of ‘disobeying law enforcement’ after taking part in a pro-Palestinian demonstration at Lundagård at Lund University on May 30th this year, Sweden’s public broadcaster SR has reported.  

The people are accused of disrupting the public order and not following police orders. Last week, two people were given fines for their part in the protests. 

Swedish vocabulary: ohörsamhet – disobedience

British footballer in coma after pool accident in Allingsås

A British teen-footballer is in a coma in Sweden after being discovered drowned unconscious at a swimming pool in Sweden.

Sajawal, 16, from Hounslow, West London, was competiting in the Gothia cup youth football tournament at Nolhaga Parkbad in Allingsås, northPool east of Gothenburg, when found unconscious in the pool on Friday.

The teen’s family are now trying to raise £20,000 to airlift him back to the UK from the Sahlgrenska Hospital in Gothenburg, where he is being treated, claiming that the hospital is planning to turn off his life support machine. 

Swedish vocabulary: koma – coma  

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TODAY IN SWEDEN

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

Social Democrats call for municipalities to be paid for wind farms, armed man breaks into state-owned mine, finance minister announces tax cuts, and other news from Sweden on Friday.

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

Masked armed man enter LKAB’s iron mine in Kiruna 

A masked man carrying what appeared to be a rifle or pistol broke into a mine site run by state-owned mining company LKAB on Thursday morning, breaking into a drilling machine where staff were working on the new Per Geijer formation. 

The man was not stopped or caught and no one on site was injured, the company said in a press statement. Work at the site has been suspended while inspections take place. 

The break-in, which took place between 2am and 3am, came only a few days after four drilling machines were vandalised in the area, with water pipes cut, tyres slashed, and fuel tanks emptied out onto the ground. 

Swedish vocabulary: att skära sönder – to cut or slash in two (or into bits)

Social Democrats call for municipalities to get money for wind turbines 

Sweden’s Social Democrat opposition has called for municipalities to be given 250,000 kronor per year for each wind turbine built on their territory, to incentivise them to give more projects the go ahead. This would mean that a wind park with 20 turbines could pump 150 million kronor into local budgets over the course of 30 years. 

“This could be used for general purposes for the areas affected by the establishment of wind farms,” Fredrik Olovsson, the party’s business spokesperson, told TT. 

Olovsson said that the government parties’ negative attitude to wind power had slowed down development of the industry. 

“The government came into Rosenbad with a destructive way of looking at wind power and we can all now see the results,” he said. 

Swedish vocabulary: allmänna ändamål – general purposes

Swedish government promises tax cuts for workers and pensioners next year

Sweden’s government has announced plans to cut income tax, as well as tax on pensions and ISK accounts, a type of investment savings account.

The new proposals will be part of the government’s coming budget, which it hopes will help improve the finances of Swedish households after years of inflation.

“This will make life easier for Swedish households,” Finance Minister Elisabeth Svantesson told a press conference, while adding that the tax cuts will also help kickstart the economy. “A lot of this will go towards consumer spending.” 

The government measures include higher tax cuts for workers and lower tax for pensioners, at a cost of around 13.5 billion kronor next year.

Anyone earning over 16,000 kronor will benefit from the proposal, while the effects of the change will be less noticeable for people with monthly salaries of 40,000 kronor and above.

“The average worker will see their tax payments cut by around 2,600 kronor a year,” Sweden Democrat finance spokesperson Oscar Sjöstedt said.

Swedish vocabulary: att få igång ekonomin – to kickstart the economy

Outgoing foreign minister denies rift with Sweden’s PM

Sweden’s foreign minister, Tobias Billström, who has said he will step down on Tuesday, has denied that a rift with Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson lies behind the decision. 

He told TT that he had a good relationship with Kristersson, with no issues causing conflict. He denied that Kristersson had put pressure on him to become Sweden’s next EU Commissioner, nor had there been any conflict over who should be the state secretary working at the foreign ministry under him. 

Billström told TT he did not know where these reports were coming from. “I have no idea and no explanation and I won’t speculate,” he said. “I just think you should quit while you’re ahead,” he added. 

Swedish vocabulary: sluta när det är som allra roligast – quit while things are the most fun/quite while you’re ahead

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