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NORD STREAM

Swedish Nord Stream investigation ‘could be shelved on Wednesday’

Sweden is preparing to shelve its investigation into the attack on the Nord Stream gas pipeline, German newspapers have reported, with the Swedish prosecutor promising an announcement on Wednesday.

Swedish Nord Stream investigation 'could be shelved on Wednesday'
A handout picture released by ImageSat International (ISI) on September 30, 2022, shows an image from an intelligence report depicting a release of gas emanating from a leak on the Nord Stream 1 gas pipeline, in the Swedish economic zone in the Baltic Sea. Photo: ImageSat International (ISI)/AFP

According to an article in the Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper, Sweden’s is set to close down its investigation without identifying any suspects, citing a lack of evidence. 

After the article was published, the Swedish prosecutor’s office issued a short press release, confirming that the prosecutor in the case, Mats Ljungqvist, planned to announce a decision on Wednesday, but given no details of what would be announced.  

The Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines, which took gas from Russia to Germany under the Baltic Sea, began leaking heavily on September 22nd 2022, with seismic laboratories in Sweden and Denmark picking up signs of explosions. Underwater investigations then proved that the piplines had been sabotaged. 

Sweden then launched an investigation into gross sabotage as one of the pipelines runs through its special economic zone. 

In an interview with the New York Times in January last year, Ljungqvist said he had never believed that Russia was responsible for blowing up the pipelines, which were 51 percent owned by the Russian gas giant Gazprom. 

“Do I believe that it was Russia who blew up Nord Stream? I have never thought that. It’s not logical,” he said. “But just like in a murder investigation, you can’t rule anything out.” 

Articles have been published by both German and US newspapers which have pinned the blame on the Ukrainian military. 

According to Germany’s Die Zeit newspaper, the end of the Swedish investigation could even help Germany prosecutors, as it would free the Swedish authorities to hand over any evidence they have gathered to their German colleagues. 

The newspaper reports that German prosecutors want access to the ruptured pipes that Swedish military recovered, so they can compared traces of explosives on the pipeline with those found on the Andromeda, the sailing yacht that German prosecutors suspect on involvement in the attacks.  

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NORTHVOLT

Toyota halts work at Swedish factory Northvolt after unexplained deaths

Toyota is temporarily pausing work for its service technicians at the Northvolt battery factory in northern Sweden after three people died under mysterious circumstances after shifts working at the factory.

Toyota halts work at Swedish factory Northvolt after unexplained deaths

“As an employer, we care about the safety of our employees,” Toyota’s head of HR, Annika Dörner, told Dagens Arbete.

“Based on the information we have received from Northvolt in Skellefteå, we as an employer have decided to carry out as little service and maintenance on site as possible.”

In the past six months, three men working at Northvolt passed away at home following shifts at the factory. Swedish police launched an investigation into the deaths this week to find out whether they’re just a coincidence, or whether the people in question may have been exposed to something while working.

Toyota’s technicians will carry out service work from the company’s own base in Skellefteå, Dörner said, while awaiting the results of the police investigation.

In a comment to Dagens Arbete, Mikael Stenmark, chief safety representative for metalworkers’ union IF Metall, criticised Toyota for pausing work on site.

“In this case Toyota has halted work without knowing if there’s a clear danger to life or health, and without knowing if there’s a risk. We can’t have a situation where companies react to rumours. We need to base these things on facts,” he told the newspaper.

“The consequence of this is that no one takes it seriously when it actually is dangerous.”

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