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Nearly one in three immigrants feel unsafe in Sweden: report

Updated: Nearly one in three immigrants feel unsafe in Sweden, according to new research by the Swedish Council on Crime Prevention.

Nearly one in three immigrants feel unsafe in Sweden: report
Do you feel safe? Photo: Janerik Henriksson/TT

The Swedish National Council for Crime Prevention's annual survey on safety in Sweden found that 30 percent of people born outside of Sweden feel unsafe when they go out at night.

Of people born in Sweden to foreign-born parents the same figure was 20 percent, compared to 17 percent among native Swedes who have at least one parent also born in the country.

The figures have increased on last year, when 24 percent of foreigners in Sweden reported feeling unsafe, compared to 13 percent of Swedes with one or two Swedish-born parents. However, if you go back ten years, the numbers have dipped slightly in both categories.

Ten percent of foreign-born people told the survey they feel so unsafe that they choose to stay at home in the evenings, compared to six percent of native Swedes with Swedish parents.

The survey also indicates a notable difference between men and women.

A total of 31 percent of women said they felt unsafe going out at night – up from 25 percent in the 2015 survey. Twelve percent said they choose not to go outside in the evenings as a result, compared to two percent of men. Again, however, compared to ten years ago the numbers have gone down slightly.

Sara Westerberg, one of the authors behind the report, told The Local that increased debate about sexual offences when the survey was carried out may have affected the results.

“We see that women are significantly more worried than men about abuse/assault, and it is possible that that affects their perceived safety. The data collection was also carried out at a time when there were a lot of discussion about sexual abuse/assault of women and that too may have affected their sense of security,” she said.

Brå's director-general Erik Wennerström urged decision-makers to take the results seriously. “This means a door shuts them out from part of their lives. They get a serious restriction of their freedom of movement that nobody should have to feel,” he told newswire TT.

Interior Minister Anders Ygeman said he wanted to step up work to crack down on sex crimes.

“We need better criminal legislation which the government is to propose, we need to increase the risk of detection, for example camera surveillance in areas exposed to crime and more police in these areas,” he told TT.

Around 1,500,000 crimes were reported to the police, prosecutor or customs in 2015, up by some four percent on the previous year. The number of reported assaults went up by two percent in 2015, while the number of reported sexual offences went down by 11 percent, according to Brå's statistics.

“Feeling unsafe is complicated and whether you have the grounds to feel unsafe is nothing we can answer because it is very individual. The actual risk of being subjected to crime is small, but it doesn't just have to be about that risk, for example young men are most often the victims of assault but are at the same time the group that is the least worried about that type of crime,” said Westerberg, but added “no matter the reason it is important that concerns are always taken seriously”.

The group leader of the Feminist Initiative Party in Stockholm described it as a “security problem and a democratic problem” that 12 percent of women said they felt too unsafe to go outside in the evening. 

Anna Rantala Bonnier urged authorities to in the short term make sure that public spaces are built with people's safety in mind, with enough lighting, movement of other people and few areas hidden from view.

“But the common factor is that nearly all violence in public spaces is committed by men, so in the long term we also need to talk about how women are viewed, masculinity norms and crime prevention measures,” she told The Local.

Around 12,000 people were interviewed for the survey, which was carried out between January and May 2016.

STRIKES

Swedish appeals court throws out Tesla licence plate complaint

A Swedish appeals court rejected Tesla's attempt to force the Transport Agency to provide them with licence plates during an ongoing strike.

Swedish appeals court throws out Tesla licence plate complaint

The Göta Court of Appeal upheld a decision by the district court to throw out a request by US car manufacturer Tesla to force the Swedish Transport Agency to provide them with licence plates, on the grounds that a general court does not have jurisdiction in this case.

The district court and court of appeal argued that Tesla should instead have taken its complaint to an administrative court (förvaltningsdomstol) rather than a general court (allmän domstol).

According to the rules regulating the Transport Agency’s role in issuing licence plates in Sweden, their decisions should be appealed to an administrative court – a separate part of the court system which tries cases involving a Swedish public authority, rather than criminal cases or disputes between individuals which are tried by the general courts.

The dispute arose after postal service Postnord, in solidarity with a major strike by the Swedish metalworkers’ union, refused to deliver licence plates to Tesla, and the Transport Agency argued it wasn’t their responsibility to get the plates to Tesla in some other way.

The strike against Tesla has been going on for almost seven months.

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