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TODAY IN SWEDEN

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

Swedish police to receive new weapon after Easter riots, government to invest 16.8 billion kronor in upcoming budget bill, and how a bridge collapse in 1980 raised safety standards in Sweden. Here's the latest news.

Today in Sweden: A roundup of the latest news on Wednesday
Swedish police will start using a new kind of gun, with rubber bullets. Photo: Pontus Lundahl/TT

Swedish police to receive new rubber bullet guns

Swedish police are set to receive a new kind of rubber bullet guns, as part of a package of measures introduced after riots broke out in several parts of the Nordic country following Quran burnings during Easter 2022, reports Swedish news agency TT.

The idea is that the new bullets will be used by police to maintain public order and safety in large crowds, and they are only supposed to be used on individuals who pose a specific threat, and not be randomly fired into crowds. 

Similar bullets are already in use in other European countries and the US. 

The plan is to roll them out for Swedish police next winter.

Swedish vocabulary: a rubber bullet – en gummikula

Sweden’s upcoming budget bill to invest 16.8 billion in new proposals

Sweden’s right-wing coalition will put forward new proposals to the tune of 16.8 billion kronor in its spring amendment budget, Finance Minister Elisabeth Svantesson told public radio broadcaster Sveriges Radio’s news programme, Ekot, on Wednesday morning.

“Our spring amendment budget is larger to be able to invest in welfare, jobs, as well as security and safety,” she said.

The spring amendment budget is usually mainly used to tweak or add bits and pieces to Sweden’s main annual budget, which was presented last autumn. This year’s spring amendment budget will be submitted to parliament on April 15th.

Svantesson declined to release any further specific details for now. The government has previously said that among other things it will give an additional 6 billion kronor in funding to Sweden’s regional governments, which is intended to prevent them laying off doctors, nurses and other health workers. It has also said it will spend 1.35 billion kronor on helping airlines handle a new baggage control system.  

It has also earmarked 25 million kronor to help eleven government agencies do more to help attract skilled foreign labour to Sweden. 

Swedish vocabulary: a spring amendment budget – en vårändringsbudget

How a bridge collapse in 1980 raised safety standards in Sweden

A Baltimore steel bridge collapse after a massive cargo ship collision in the early hours of Tuesday, with several people missing and presumed dead, made many Swedes remember a similar accident in Sweden more than four decades ago.

In 1980, a Norwegian ship hit one of the pillars supporting the bridge between Stenungsund and the island of Tjörn in western Sweden, causing the bridge to collapse. In a strange coincidence, the accident happened at the same time of night as in Baltimore: around 1.30am. 

Despite the efforts of a quick-thinking truck driver and the crew onboard the ship to warn drivers not to cross the bridge, several vehicles went into the water after noticing too late that the bridge was no longer there. Eight people, all men, died. 

The Tjörn bridge disaster raised the security standard at Swedish bridges, through installing collision protection but also placing the bridge supports outside the shipping lane, which has made it far less likely that a similar accident will happen in Sweden again.

Swedish vocabulary: a bridge – en bro

New forecast: Sweden’s economic downturn will bottom out this year

As The Local reported on Tuesday, Sweden’s economic downturn will bottom out in 2024 and the key interest rate will be lowered four times this year, according to a new forecast by Sweden’s National Institute of Economic Research (NIER).

Sweden’s GDP will grow by 0.8 percent this year before rising to 2.5 percent next year, according to the new forecast. However, unemployment will continue to rise, hitting 8.3 percent this year, before dropping in 2025.

The institute’s core measure of inflation, CPIF, which strips out the effect of interest rate rises, fell to 2.5 percent in February. The institute expects that it will continue to drop throughout 2024, reaching 1.2 percent by the end of the year, far below the Riksbank’s 2 percent target.

Swedish vocabulary: four times – fyra gånger

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TODAY IN SWEDEN

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

Sweden's Eurovision opening act rebuked over Palestine scarf, 11 foreign soldiers injured in Swedish Nato exercise, and will the Riksbank cut the interest rate today? Here's the latest news.

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

EBU slams Swedish Eurovision opening act for wearing Palestine scarf

The Eurovision Song Contest semi-finals kicked off on Tuesday evening. Security was high at Malmö Arena – where Sweden’s terror threat level and a row over Israel’s participation in the contest have been a challenge for organisers – but the evening unfolded without much ado. 

The biggest headlines were grabbed by Swedish artist Eric Saade, who performed as the opening act, wearing a Palestine keffiyeh, a scarf, wrapped around his wrist. Saade’s mother is Swedish and his father is a Palestinian who was born and raised in Lebanon. Saade has been critical of the European Broadcasting Union’s decision to allow Israel to compete despite its involvement in the brutal war in Gaza. 

Both Swedish public broadcaster SVT and the EBU criticised Saade for wearing the scarf.

“The Eurovision Song Contest is a live TV show. All performers are made aware of the rules of the contest, and we regret that Eric Saade chose to compromise the non-political nature of the event,” said EBU in a statement. 

“I got that scarf from my dad as a little boy, to never forget where the family comes from. I didn’t know then that it one day would be called a ‘political symbol’. That’s like calling the Dala horse a political symbol. To my eyes, it’s nothing but racism. I just wanted to be inclusive and carry something that’s real to me – but EBU seems to think that my ethnicity is controversial. That says nothing about me, but everything about them. I repeat this year’s Eurovision Song Contest slogan: United by music,” Saade responded in a text message to SVT.

Swedish vocabulary: a wrist – en handled

Will Sweden’s central bank cut interest rates today?

The Swedish central bank, the Riksbank, is set to make a widely awaited announcement on the country’s so-called policy rate at 9.30am on Wednesday. Many are hoping that it will cut the rate for the first time in eight years, but it’s possible they will postpone the cut another month.

The policy rate currently stands at 4.0 percent, the highest interest rate seen in Sweden since 2008.

This is a crucial announcement, as the policy rate is the bank’s main monetary policy tool. It decides which rates Swedish banks can deposit in and borrow money from the Riksbank, which in turn affects the banks’ own interest rates on savings, loans and mortgages.

If bank interest rates are high, it’s expensive to borrow money, which means people spend less and as a result inflation drops.

But now that inflation is on its way down, Riksbank chiefs themselves have said that they think it’s likely that they will cut the policy rate in either May or June, and several economists predict that the cut is going to come sooner rather than later, which would mean today.

The Local will cover the interest rate announcement when it comes.

Swedish vocabulary: an interest rate – en ränta

11 foreign soldiers injured in Nato exercise in Sweden

Eleven soldiers were injured while jumping from parachutes during a Nato exercise in Småland, south-eastern Sweden.

The soldiers are from the US, Hungary and Italy, reports the Aftonbladet tabloid, and were taken to hospital in Linköping and Jönköping.

“We’re talking wounds and fractures, no one has life-threatening injuries,” an Army spokesperson confirmed to Aftonbladet.

Between 600 and 800 Nato troops carried out parachute jumps on Tuesday.

Swedish vocabulary: a parachute – en fallskärm

Swedes warned of surprise May snowfall

Hope you enjoyed the summer while it lasted, because on Wednesday snow was again set to fall in central Sweden.

Weather agency SMHI warned people living in areas where it snowed overnight, particularly in some parts of Västernorrland and northern Jämtland, to drive slowly and carefully as they and most other people will probably already have switched to summer tyres by now. 

Even Stockholm may get some flakes of snow, but it’s not clear how much will actually stick.

May snowfall is unusual but not unique, an SMHI spokesperson told the TT newswire.

The southern Götaland region will get to enjoy summer temperatures on Wednesday, and the mercury is expected to climb back into double-digits in the rest of the country as well on Thursday.

Swedish vocabulary: unusual – ovanligt 

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