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DISCRIMINATION

SURVEY: ‘Sweden is decades behind on racism and diversity’

A majority of the more than 500 readers who responded to The Local's survey said they agreed that Sweden was a racist or xenophobic country, at least in part, with almost half saying that the election of a new anti-immigration government had made them less likely to stay here in the future.

SURVEY: 'Sweden is decades behind on racism and diversity'
New Swedish citizens hold up their diplomas at a citizenship ceremony in Sundbyberg, outside Stockholm, this summer. Photo: Janerik Henriksson/TT

We asked our readers if they felt welcome in Sweden, how they felt towards Sweden’s new right-wing Sweden Democrat-backed government, whether they thought the statement “Sweden is a racist and xenophobic country” was true or false, and if the new government had affected their future plans to stay in Sweden.

At the time of writing, our survey had received over 500 responses, more than we’ve ever had for one of our editorial surveys, although it’s important to note, that as respondents were self-selecting, this is not a scientific study. 

Over three quarters of respondents (78.2 percent) were either ‘very’ or ‘slightly’ negative about Sweden’s new government, just over half (51 percent) felt less welcome in Sweden than before the new government took power, and well over half (57 percent) said that the statement “Sweden is a racist and xenophobic country” was either “completely” or “somewhat” true.

Additionally, just under half (47.9 percent) said that the election of the new government had made them less likely to stay in Sweden in the future.

‘Felt fine under Stefan Löfven’

It wasn’t just the new government who had made some feel less welcome. One 30-year-old American woman living in Sweden with her Syrian husband stated that she had “felt fine under Stefan Löfven”, but felt that Magdalena Andersson’s rhetoric towards the end of the election was “racist” and she and her husband had felt less welcome since then.

‘I don’t know if I will invest my money here’

One non-EU tech worker said that the outcome of the recent election “has not affected my intention to stay in Sweden, but is likely to make it legally and logistically less likely”.

A Brazilian buyer in an international company wrote that “before, I was planning to buy a house in two or three years. Now, I really don’t know if I will invest my money here.”

The Brazilian man, who wished to remain anonymous, added that he was “looking for stability for me and my family”.

“Considering my condition here (work permit), I feel that I don’t have this stability and also I cannot make long-term plans.”

‘Reality is not so squeaky clean’

On the question of whether Sweden is a racist society, many respondents said that the reality is more nuanced.

One of these included Stuart, a humanitarian volunteer in Gothenburg, who said that he believes Sweden “has always been [racist] under the surface, but I still think it’s not all Swedes”.

“It is not always hardcore racism,” he said. “Just that Swedes prefer to hang out with other Swedes.”

“It is a hard society to integrate into. They believe the image that Sweden is a tolerant society protecting human rights but the reality is not so squeaky clean,” he added.

Kashyap Haresamudram, an Indian doctoral researcher at Lund University, said that he feels welcome among his peers at the university, but that outside this “bubble”, he occasionally feels like he is more of an outsider.

“As a PhD student, I generally tend to meet academics, other highly educated individuals, and internationally oriented Swedes, and within this bubble I feel welcome and comfortable,” Haresamudram said.

“But outside this bubble, there are times when I feel like I do not fit in, when I’m very aware that I’m seen as an outsider. And that can be uncomfortable when all you want to do is blend in.”

‘Decades behind’

Others, including a 34-year-old South Asian reader, who wanted to remain anonymous, said that in her opinion Sweden is “decades behind on any conversations related to race and diversity”.

“Swedes do not acknowledge either of these things, which is very dangerous in an increasingly diverse society,” she said.

“Whether Swedes like it or not, the make-up of their country is changing and there are now a couple of generations of immigrants here who are contributing to making it a stronger economy and society,” she added.

“I am a highly-educated, highly-paid foreign worker and a person of colour who has lived all over the world — and I have never had the sorts of experiences that I have had in Sweden, such as being the only one to have my bags searched at grocery stores, being told by a bank to open an account ‘near where I live’ when I went to a branch in my upscale neighbourhood, etc.”

Another individual who contacted us via email, a 33-year-old doctor who described herself as a half-Indian, half-Bangladeshi, and from the UK, said that patients had called her ‘jävla invandrare‘ (‘bloody immigrant’) “countless times when they don’t get what they want”, and that the son of a patient said she “didn’t sound Swedish” and called her a “f*cking Arab” when she called him to discuss his mother’s treatment.

She also said that she has been “told that I’m the right type of immigrant because I’m more European”.

“I see a huge difference in behaviour from when people see my skin colour and assume I’m from a non-European country to when they find out I’m British,” she wrote.

Structural racism

A number of respondents cited discrimination on a structural level which led them to believe that Sweden was a racist society, such as struggling to find work or housing due to their appearance or name, or seeing friends or colleagues struggle to do so.

One respondent, who described himself as “a reader from western Sweden”, said that he had seen friends and acquaintances struggle to find work despite being highly qualified.

“I know a black person from Ghana who got a Masters degree in Financial Engineering in Sweden and has not been able to find a job for two years,” he said. “All of his classmates found a job. Now he works at Burger King.”

An engineer from a non-EU country who is in Sweden on a work permit described a “glass ceiling of career growth”, which, he added, led to “instability” for his long-term plans to live in Sweden.

‘Treated like criminals’

A common theme across many of the responses we received was the feeling that Sweden’s new policies have already started to drive away highly-educated foreign workers.

The 34-year-old South Asian woman quoted above said foreign workers like herself are “treated like criminals for just being foreign”.

“We live here legally, contribute to society and pay bucketloads in taxes. Sweden desperately needs foreign workers but the government here is enacting policies that will drive us away in droves. What a shame.”

‘It can be deeply traumatising’

Haresamudram, the Indian doctoral researcher quoted above, said added that while he has never experienced “overt racism and xenophobia”, “microaggressions are common”.

“Most times it is innocent and obvious that it stems from ignorance or lack of awareness, and while it can still be unpleasant, it is easy to shrug off.”

“But the rare few times that there is malicious intent, it can be a deeply traumatising experience. I’ve fortunately had very few of those, but I know others who haven’t been so fortunate. It really depends on where you fall on the socio-economic ladder I think.”

‘I felt so powerless. I felt I did not matter’

Another individual, a Japanese woman who contacted The Local via email, detailed the verbal and physical race-related abuse she claimed she received at the hands of a security guard in an Ica supermarket.

“I made a mistake at the self checkout and forgot to scan a pack of eggs,” she wrote. “The Ica security guard saw this, and physically attacked me unprovoked, leaving bruises and scars on my arms and hands.”

“He tried to take my phone away and when I begged to call my family he threatened me saying that he can make my life difficult.”

“He made a comment about my race and when he learned that I do not speak Swedish he yelled ‘When you live in Sweden you are obligated to speak Swedish.'”

She claimed that the security guard took her to a locked interrogation room and made a civil arrest, which she later learned was illegal. The management team at the Ica store refused to help, telling her to call the police if she wanted to complain.

“I am still traumatized by the experience,” she said.

“I felt so powerless as there was not much done by the authorities. I felt I did not matter.”

‘Mixed feelings’ for PhD students

One of the groups which may find it easier to stay in Sweden under the new government’s migration policy proposals are PhD students.

Haresamudram explained his “mixed feelings” as a PhD student who may benefit from these proposals in an anti-immigrant climate.

On the one hand you have this privileged position of being the “good” immigrant as a PhD with some favourable policies, but still being surrounded by the general anti-immigrant sentiment.

It is a strange time to be a PhD student in Sweden. While the general rhetoric is evidently very anti-immigrant, there seems to be a small pro-PhD voice in the Liberals within the coalition who want to make it easier for Sweden-educated PhD’s to remain and find work.”

He described the uncertainty as “anxiety-inducing”, especially for those in his position who are halfway through their PhD studies.

“Nobody on the street is going to question what type of immigrant someone is before making a judgement, and the general rhetoric is harmful on a societal level and will undoubtedly have negative consequences for foreigners in terms of our ability to belong and identify with Sweden and Swedish culture, our ability to participate in Swedish society, and our general quality of life, irrespective of what privileges you may have because of education or economy.”

“But of course it is always easier for those that do have the privileges compared to those that don’t.”

‘I saw racism from a different perspective’

A number of responses were from immigrants who “look Swedish”, who spoke of the difference in how they had been treated compared with friends or family members of colour.

One of those was Alex. “We are a mixed race family, originally from Australia but we have lived in the UK and Hong Kong for many years,” she wrote. “We live in Östermalm and in this area my husband, who is half Chinese, has had racist slurs directed at him.”

The racist slurs directed to her husband paled in comparison to the treatment her daughter had received, she explained.

“Our nineteen-year-old daughter has suffered the most. She has had continuous sexual harassment. She has had men follow her, photograph her, try to grab her, say disgusting things to her and generally treat her like an object.”

“She has lived in so many other countries and never had this level of sexual harassment. When I have spoken to Swedish girls of a similar age (who have blonde hair, blue eyes) they report nothing like this.”

“My daughter had such a horrible experience whilst living in Stockholm that she has gone to university in London.”

“I will admit that when I move through the city (looking very Swedish) I have only had positive experiences,” Alex added.

“Without my husband and daughter’s first-hand experience I would find it hard to reconcile my own experience with theirs. I think many Swedes must feel that this issue is exaggerated or even made up as they have no first-hand knowledge.”

‘Sweden will be safer again’

Some respondents to our survey welcome the new government, including one Indian man living in a small Swedish city ,who wished to remain anonymous.

I feel positive to the new government because I know Sweden will be safer again,” he said. “Stricter punishments, expulsions and reducing immigration will all contribute to this. I say this as a non-EU person of colour.”

He also felt that the statement that Sweden was a racist and xenophobic country was “somewhat false”, writing that “racism exists everywhere”.

“As a POC I haven’t experienced any and have travelled all over Sweden,” he wrote.

A Singaporean woman working as a communications professional in Sweden expressed similar views.

“I’m brown, Muslim and Asian and I’ve lived in multiple countries. There’s racism everywhere.”

“On paper, Sweden seems to be the least racist considering how they’ve let in so many refugees (most per capita in Europe),” she said. “Naturally, there will more racial frictions compared to a country which takes little or no refugees (Japan, Finland, Norway).”

“That said,” she added, “I’ve seen concerning comments online about how native Swedes are upset about immigrants.”

“Basically, there’s racism in Sweden, like in any other country, but considering the amount of immigration they have taken in with bad integration planning, there’s bound to be more visible clashes. It is not a net-racist country in my experience.”

She was, however, negative towards Sweden’s new government, adding that it “seems to want to overcorrect the previous government’s wrongs in a way that may breed real xenophobia and harm towards non-native Swedes and immigrants.”

‘Many kind, open-minded and welcoming Swedes’

Finally, many of those we spoke to were quick to state that, even though they had experienced racism or xenophobia either second or first-hand, they had met many kind and open-minded Swedes in the country.

One man living in Halmstad stated that he was considering moving away, but was “having conflicts within when thinking of some of the kind Swedes that I have come to meet”.

A Portuguese designer based in Malmö said that Swedes have “always treated me well and with respect even though I couldn’t speak Swedish,” and that she had always felt welcome in the country “until now”.

“I have had nothing but friendly curiosity from Swedes,” an American engineer said. “I also noticed that when I worked hard to learn the Swedish language and customs, they became even more welcoming.”

“Every country on Earth has racists and bigots unfortunately, but Sweden thankfully has fewer of them than many other places,” he said.

Member comments

  1. If you come to Sweden without your on money , and the ability to finance everything you want , turn around and go back to the airport . I intentionally do not speak Swedish , and speak in my Oxford accent English so the racist guard does not automatically come up with Swedes . It’s a very difficult place to survive in if you want to settle in Sweden and are non White .

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HEALTH

Sweden votes ‘yes’ to lowering age for legal gender change

Sweden's parliament on Wednesday passed a controversial law lowering the minimum age to legally change gender from 18 to 16 and making it easier to get access to surgical interventions.

Sweden votes 'yes' to lowering age for legal gender change

The law passed with 234 votes in favour and 94 against in Sweden’s 349-seat parliament.

While the Nordic country was the first to introduce legal gender reassignment in 1972, the proposal, aimed at allowing so-called “self-identification” and simplifying the procedure, sparked an intense debate in the country.

The debate has also weakened conservative Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson’s standing, after he admitted to caving into pressure from party members on the issue.

“The great majority of Swedes will never notice that the law has changed, but for a number of transgender people the new law makes a large and important difference,” Johan Hultberg, an MP representing the ruling conservative Moderate Party, told parliament.

Beyond lowering the age, the new legislation is aimed at making it simpler for a person to change their legal gender.

“The process today is very long, it can take up to seven years to change your legal gender in Sweden,” Peter Sidlund Ponkala, president of the Swedish Federation for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer and Intersex Rights (RFSL), told AFP.

Two new laws will go into force on July 1, 2025: one regulating surgical procedures to change gender, and one regulating the administrative procedure to change legal gender in the official register.

No diagnosis needed

People will be able to change their legal gender as of age 16, though those under 18 will need the approval of their parents, a doctor, and the National Board of Health and Welfare.

A diagnosis of “gender dysphoria” — where a person may experience distress as a result of a mismatch between their biological sex and the gender they identify as — will no longer be required.

Surgical procedures to transition would, like now, be allowed from the age of 18, but would no longer require the Board of Health and Welfare’s approval.

The removal of ovaries or testes will however only be allowed from the age of 23, unchanged from today.

A number of European countries have already passed laws making it easier for people to change their legal gender.

Citing a need for caution, Swedish authorities decided in 2022 to halt hormone therapy for minors except in very rare cases, and ruled that mastectomies for teenage girls wanting to transition should be limited to a research setting.

Sweden has seen a sharp rise in gender dysphoria cases.

The trend is particularly visible among 13- to 17-year-olds born female, with an increase of 1,500 percent since 2008, according to the Board of Health and Welfare.

While tolerance for gender transitions has long been high in the progressive and liberal country, political parties across the board have been torn by internal divisions over the new proposal, and academics, health care professionals and commentators have come down on both sides of the issue.

‘Deplorable’

A poll published this week suggested almost 60 percent of Swedes oppose the proposal, while only 22 percent back it.

Far-right Sweden Democrats leader Jimmie Akesson lamented the result of Wednesday’s vote.

“I think it’s deplorable that a proposal that obviously lacks support among the population is so casually voted through,” Akesson told reporters.

Some critics had expressed concerns about biological males in women’s locker rooms and prisons, and fear the simplified procedure to change legal gender will encourage confused youths to embark down the path toward surgical transitions.

Others had insisted that more study was needed given the lack of explanation for the sharp rise in gender dysphoria.

In a sign of the strong feelings it stirred, members of parliament spent six hours debating the proposal.

“There is a clear correlation with different types of psychiatric conditions or diagnoses, such as autism,” Annika Strandhall, head of the women’s wing of the Social Democrats (S-kvinnor), told Swedish news agency TT ahead of the vote.

“We want to pause this (age change) and wait until there is further research that can explain this increase” in gender dysphoria cases.

Kristersson, the prime minister, had defended the proposal as “balanced and responsible”.

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