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CRIME

Court rejects Albanian extradition request

The Swedish Supreme Court (HD) has backed a decision by prosecutors not to extradite a woman suspected of carrying out several murders in Albania due to concerns that her human rights would not be respected.

The court ruled that the 45-year-old Albanian woman should not be extradited to Albania as “the investigation into her case indicates that she runs a serious risk of being subjected to treatment in contravention of article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).”

The court supported the findings of the head public prosecutor in Sweden, and on the advice of the Swedish Migration Board concluded that the Albanian authorities would not be able to provide sufficient protection to the woman.

The Supreme Court cited a 2007 report by the Swedish foreign ministry on the human rights situation in Albania to support its decision.

The woman had previously been sentenced by a judge in Albania to 25 years in prison for crimes carried out in 2002, including the killing of two men to avenge her brother’s death.

She was arrested in April on international arrest warrants and has been in custody in western Sweden while courts have tried to determine whether the 45-year-old woman, and her 70-year-old brother, should be sent back to Albania.

The Supreme Court noted that the woman flatly denies the allegations against her and that she considers “the trial against her in Albania to be a show trial”, and that the “political leadership in Albania is trying to silence her.”

The woman argues that if she were to be extradited to Albania she would be “tortured, humiliated and finally murdered.”

The Supreme Court found no basis to object to the extradition according to the European Convention on Extradition but instead based its decision explicitly on concerns over the woman’s right to the protection of her human rights enshrined in the ECHR.

Article three of the convention prohibits “torture and inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment” and is commonly cited to prohibit the extradition of a person to a foreign state is they are likely to be subjected there to torture.

The Supreme Court has previously made a similar ruling in respect of her brother who has since been released from the detention centre in Alingsås.

LANDSLIDE

Swedish authorities: Worker negligence behind motorway landslide

Swedish authorities said on Thursday that worker negligence at a construction site was believed to be behind a landslide that tore apart a motorway in western Sweden in September.

Swedish authorities: Worker negligence behind motorway landslide

The landslide, which struck the E6 highway in Stenungsund, 50 kilometres north of Sweden’s second-largest city Gothenburg, ripped up a petrol station car park, overturned lorries and caved in the roof of a fast food restaurant.

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Prosecutor Daniel Veivo Pettersson said on Thursday he believed “human factors” were behind the landslide as “no natural cause” had been found during the investigation.

He told a press conference the landslide had been triggered by a nearby construction site where too much excavated material had been piled up, putting excessive strain on the ground below. 

“At this stage, we consider it negligent, in this case grossly negligent, to have placed so much excavated material on the site,” Pettersson said.

Pettersson added that three people were suspected of among other things gross negligence and causing bodily harm, adding that the investigation was still ongoing.

The worst-hit area covered around 100 metres by 150 metres, but the landslide affected an area of around 700 metres by 200 metres in total, according to emergency services.

Three people were taken to hospital with minor injuries after the collapse, according to authorities.

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