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Denmark boosts border checks with Sweden amid gang violence

Denmark said on Friday it was beefing up its border controls with Sweden following a resurgence of Swedish gang violence that has spilled over into Denmark in recent weeks.

Denmark boosts border checks with Sweden amid gang violence
Denmark is to place border checks on the Øresund Bridge crossing from Sweden after a recent flare-up in gang violence. Photo by Karl Hörnfeldt on Unsplash

Copenhagen said it hoped to contain the spread of violence on its territory, after Swedes were arrested suspected of several violent crimes in Denmark.

“The (Danish) police have decided to increase controls with Sweden,” Danish Justice Minister Peter Hummelgaard told TV2 television.

“Just before the summer break, the Danish parliament adopted… a vast series of measures regarding the gangs which… give police new and better tools to fight organised crime,” he said in a statement published by his ministry.

“Today, we are tightening the screws even further.”

Police controls will be increased on trains crossing the Øresund Strait between the southern Swedish city of Malmö and the Danish capital Copenhagen, the main crossing point between the countries. They will also be increased on the Øresund road bridge linking the two cities, with the use of camera surveillance among other things.

Hummelgaard had earlier ruled out border measures in response to the gang incidents.

Since April, Swedes have been implicated in 25 cases in Denmark linked to organised crime, Hummelgaard told reporters on Thursday.

In recent days, three Swedes — all minors — have been arrested and held in custody following three shootings in Denmark.

READ ALSO: Danish minister vows to tackle spate of shootings by Swedish teens

Sweden has struggled to contain the rising gang violence in recent years, with shootings and bombings now weekly occurrences across the Scandinavian country.

Other violent incidents linked to Sweden’s gangs have taken place in Norway, Turkey and Iraq in recent months.

The Swedish gang violence was originally linked to control over the drugs market, but has increasingly spread to rivalries and personal vendettas, among other things.

Member comments

  1. It such a shame that a few bad apples are making lives of many more miserable especially those regular commuters and undermine trust,at the same time one must understand the danish anxiety .Hope these remain temporary!

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ECONOMY

Sweden in ‘clear recession’ as economy continues to tread water

Sweden is in a 'clear recession' according to nearly all indicators, said the country’s statistics bureau.

Sweden in 'clear recession' as economy continues to tread water

“The Swedish economy is treading water. Activity in June 2024 was at the same level as in June 2022,” said Statistics Sweden economist Caroline Ahlstrand.

Statistics Sweden’s so-called “business cycle clock” – essentially a quadrant chart of the state and direction of the economy – shows that ten out of twelve metrics are below their long-term trend, and nine of them are firmly in the field that indicates a recession.

Those nine include the monthly GDP indicator, private sector production, household consumption, newly registered cars, exports of goods, private sector demand, orders in industry, retail trade durables, imports of good and the total number of hours worked.

Statistics Sweden’s business cycle clock. The quadrants show, from top left, expansion, slowdown, recession and recovery. In the green are household confidence (top left) and newly-registered trucks (top right). Photo: Statistics Sweden

It’s not all bad news. Sweden’s GDP showed a slight uptick in June, and the central bank, the Riksbank, has in the past year managed to bring inflation down below its two-percent target.

But despite the lower inflation, household consumption continues to fall, warn Statistics Sweden.

READ ALSO:

The Riksbank is expected to again lower Sweden’s key interest rate, the so-called policy rate, by 0.25 percentage points on Tuesday, putting it at 3.50 percent.

The policy rate is the central 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.

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