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TODAY IN SWEDEN

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

Swedish chefs clinch silver at Bocuse d'Or, Scandinavian ski resorts boosted by shortage of snow in the Alps, and did construction work on Stockholm's new underground line kill lab rats at the Karolinska Institute? Here's the latest news.

Today in Sweden: A roundup of the latest news on Thursday
The Swedish silver medallists at the Bocuse d'Or. Photo: Gorm Kallestad/NTB

Swedish chefs clinch silver at Bocuse d’Or

Sweden took home the silver in the European final of prestigious gastronomical competition Bocuse d’Or in Trondheim. 

The chefs had to compose a dinner out of Norwegian ingredients skrei (a type of cod), dried and salted cod, scallops and reindeer.

“I’m very happy but not satisfied, I would have wanted the gold,” Gustav Leonhardt told Swedish news agency TT afterwards.

The gold instead went to Denmark, while Norway claimed third place, making it an all-Scandinavian top three.

Out of 20 countries that participated on Wednesday, 10 went go through to the world final in Lyon in January next year.

Swedish vocabulary: a chef – en kock

Did Stockholm’s new underground line kill Karolinska’s lab rats?

Researchers at Sweden’s prestigious Karolinska Institute suspect that some of their laboratory rats died due to stress as a result of controlled explosions carried out to build Stockholm’s new underground line, reports research magazine Forskning & Framsteg.

Construction got under way on the new underground line between Odenplan and Arenastaden in January 2020. In August the same year, Karolinska Institute researchers during trials began seeing heart arrhythmia in their lab rats, who were also dying faster than before.

Between August 2022 and December last year, 31 out of 35 rats died in trials. Before that, the survival rate was between 67 and 90 percent.

The research team believes, but concede they have no evidence, that the rats were affected by vibrations from the blasts. A new station, Hagastaden, is also being built near Karolinska as part of the new underground. Region Stockholm, however, dismisses the suspicions.

Swedish vocabulary: a rat – en råtta

Uppsala ambulance staff handed bulletproof vests

Ambulance staff in Uppsala are the first in Sweden to wear bulletproof vests, writes union magazine Kommunalarbetaren.

“I’m happy I have it. I feel safe,” ambulance worker Lena Arkegrim told the magazine. 

She said the region first started talking about bulletproof vests on callouts after the deadly terror attack in Stockholm in 2017, but in recent months Uppsala has had several gang-related shootings. 

Uppsala is the only region to have introduced the extra protection, according to Kommunalarbetaren, but the issue has been up for discussion in both Stockholm and Dalarna. In Gävleborg, staff have been trained in dealing with threats or violence, and in Sörmland a survey has been carried out to pick up on staff concerns.

Swedish vocabulary: a bulletproof vest – en skottsäker väst

Swedish ski resorts boosted by shortage of snow in the Alps

A weak krona and higher certainty of snow boosted Sweden’s ski resorts this winter, as more foreign tourists seem to be turning northwards in search of a cold winter. Ski resorts in the Alps are increasingly struggling with a lack of snow on the slopes due to climate change.

Foreign tourists made up around 30 percent of visitors to Skistar resorts in Sweden, with Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom being among the top countries. 

Skistar CEO Stefan Sjöstrand stressed in an interview with Swedish news agency TT that he was not happy with the consequences of climate change, but conceded that when Europe gets warmer, more ski tourists head to Sweden and the rest of Scandinavia.

“The climate investigations we’ve done together with SMHI and DMI [the Swedish and Danish meteorological offices] show that Scandinavia is the winter when it comes to skiing and certainty of snow in the next 20-50 years,” he said.

Swedish vocabulary: a ski resort – en skidort

In case you missed it: Is it time for Sweden to embrace language barriers?

In a recent article in Dagens Nyheter, journalist Alex Schulman praised the Danish coach of Sweden’s football team for speaking English in press conferences, rather than Scandinavian.

For most immigrants, language barriers are a fact of life, writes The Local’s deputy editor Becky Waterton in a new opinion piece.

“Whether that’s trying to decipher the syllables of a Swedish sentence as a new learner or being met with a blank stare when we try to order a coffee for the first time in Swedish, it’s a natural part of getting to know a new country,” she writes.

“Swedes, on the other hand, seem to find language barriers intensely awkward, doing whatever they can to either avoid them or pretend they don’t exist,” she continues. “But wouldn’t it be better to embrace the Danish-Swedish language barrier, instead of avoiding it?”

Swedish vocabulary: Danish – danska

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TODAY IN SWEDEN

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

Thousands join Malmö protest against Israel's Eurovision entry, Spotify concerned foreign talent will reject Sweden over high taxes, schools and housing, and troubled suburbs have low confidence in Swedish media's Gaza coverage. Here's the latest news.

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

Thousands join Malmö protest against Israel’s Eurovision entry

Thousands of people marched through Malmö to protest Israel’s participation in the Eurovision Song Contest over the Gaza war.

Singer Eden Golan performed her song “Hurricane” in Thursday’s second semi-final without incident in front of 9,000 spectators at the Malmö Arena and booked her place in Saturday’s final after a televote.

Earlier in the day, more than 10,000 people including climate activist Greta Thunberg gathered in Malmö’s main square before marching through the southern Swedish city’s central pedestrian shopping street, according to police estimates.

In a separate demonstration, about 100 counter-protesters gathered under police protection to express their support for Israel.

According to police, nine people in total on Thursday were held for breaching public order and one person on suspicion of carrying a knife, but otherwise police described the protests and day in general as calm considering the thousands of people who participated.

Swedish vocabulary: calm – lugn

Spotify concerned foreign talent will reject Sweden over taxes, schools and housing 

High taxes on share payouts, low-quality schools and Stockholm’s housing shortage are the main factors making it harder for Spotify to recruit foreign talent to Sweden, the streaming giant’s HR boss, Katarina Berg, told Swedish news agency TT in an interview.

She called it a “skills exodus” which pushes even Swedes to move abroad, she argued. 

Stockholm remains the company’s HQ, but today it employs more people in New York, where there’s a greater pool of engineers, who make up around 50 percent of staff. Berg said Sweden’s high taxes on Spotify’s share-based rewards programme for employees turns people off. 

“Depending on where in the world you work, you could get taxed 17 percent, 33 percent – or 56 percent, like in Sweden. Of course that could determine where an employee wants to work. You don’t choose Sweden then,” she said.

Housing and good schools, in particular senior high schools, are also key factors, Berg argued.

“We get a lot of families who come here. They settle down. They want to stay here. They like the Swedish philosophy, with quite a lot of parental leave, another type of holidays and balance in life. But then when their children get so big that they need their grades to apply to a university somewhere, perhaps a US college, our Swedish schools are not up to scratch,” she said.

Swedish vocabulary: up to scratch – hålla måttet

Low confidence in Swedish media’s Gaza coverage in troubled suburbs

Swedes with foreign backgrounds in vulnerable areas don’t trust Swedish media’s ability to cover the Gaza war correctly, according to a new survey by Järvaveckan Research, the research branch of the Järvaveckan political festival, which is held every year in northern Stockholm.

Twenty-one percent of the group told the survey that they had fairly or very great confidence in Swedish news media’s ability to provide accurate and unbiased coverage of the war between Israel and Hamas. The corresponding figure for the rest of Sweden is 43 percent.

Forty-eight percent said they had little confidence in Swedish media’s Gaza coverage, compared to 26 percent of the overall population.

Swedish vocabulary: to have confidence in – att ha förtroende för

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