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NORTHVOLT

Swedish police investigate fourth death of Northvolt worker

A fourth person working at Swedish battery maker Northvolt's factory in Skellefteå has died, according to police. But Northvolt denied that the death had anything to do with the workplace.

Swedish police investigate fourth death of Northvolt worker
Northvolt's battery factory in Skellefteå, northern Sweden. File photo: Axel Hilleskog/SvD/TT

Earlier this summer police launched an investigation after three apparently healthy men who all worked at Northvolt passed away at home in the past six months following shifts at the factory. It has not yet been established whether the deaths are linked or just a coincidence. 

On Tuesday, police announced a fourth person died in July. 

A fifth person also took ill while working at the factory, police said.

Northvolt said the fourth death was unrelated to the workplace.

“I have had it confirmed by police that the death to which they refer is a colleague who died after a tragic drowning accident in their spare time,” Northvolt press spokesperson Matti Kataja told the Aftonbladet newspaper.

“It would be good if police could be clear about this to avoid speculation, as the information obviously causes concern and leads to more rumours,” he added.

In January, a 33-year-old man was found dead in his bed after working an evening shift as a cleaner at Northvolt. A month later, a 19-year-old was also found dead in bed after his shift at the factory. And in June a 59-year-old man was found dead on his balcony.

The only things the three men seem to have in common are that their deaths cannot be explained, and that they all happened after they had worked shifts at Northvolt’s flagship factory. However, there is no evidence that their deaths are linked to their work at Northvolt.

Police have not labelled any of the deaths as suspicious, but one of the unconfirmed theories that have been floated in the media is that they could possibly have been exposed to some kind of substance in the workplace.

“At the moment, there is no concrete connection between any of the incidents, nor have we been able to ascertain what caused the incidents,” said police on Tuesday.

The investigation is still ongoing. 

Do you know more? Email The Local’s editor at emma.lofgren@thelocal.com. You can be anonymous.

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POLITICS

What are the Swedish government’s key priorities for the year ahead?

Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson outlined the government's key priorities as parliament reopened on Tuesday after the summer recess.

What are the Swedish government's key priorities for the year ahead?

Kristersson noted in his “declaration of government” speech that Sweden is now a member of Nato, that the previously rampant inflation is stabilising at lower levels, and that police are solving more and more gang crimes.

“Month by month, it’s getting harder to be a criminal,” he said, as his government entered the second half of its term, with two years to go until the next election.

“Sweden was long getting poorer and more dangerous. We have started the journey towards becoming richer and safer,” he told the audience of MPs and royal family.

“This is a government that gets things done,” he said.

Kristersson also spoke of his government’s so-called paradigm shift on migration, a key part of the right-wing coalition’s collaboration with the far-right Sweden Democrats.

Some of the proposals include providing incentives for voluntary re-migration, set up reception centres for asylum seekers and make it compulsory for young children in homes where they aren’t learning any Swedish to attend a special language preschool.

He added that asylum migration is at its lowest level.

“When migration decreases, Sweden is given better preconditions to manage integration. How well we as a country succeed in that mission will define what kind of country Sweden is in ten and twenty years,” he said.

As The Local has previously been able to show, highly-qualified migration has fallen in the past year, but Kristersson insisted in his speech that Sweden should be “an attractive country for highly-qualified labour migration, foreign researchers, doctoral students”.

He spoke at length about the government’s attempts to crack down on gang crime, including plans to tighten sentences for youth criminals.

The government expects to earmark 2.3 percent of Sweden’s GDP on military defence, said Kristersson.

Kristersson also brought up one of his Liberal allies’ core issues: decreasing screen time for children.

“We won’t passively accept that children become slaves to the algorithms,” he said, adding that the government will put forward a proposal to completely ban mobile phones in schools and introduce economic subsidies for leisure activities for children.

Kristersson on Tuesday also announced a major reshuffle of his government, promoting Maria Malmer Stenergard to foreign minister and replacing her as migration minister with Johan Forsell, currently minister for foreign trade and international development.

Here’s an English translation of Kristersson’s speech in full.

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