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CRIME

Sister retracts ‘honour killing’ allegations

A 21-year-old woman from Gothenburg in western Sweden who had accused her brother of threatening to take her life in an “honour killing", retracted her allegations on the opening day of the trial on Monday.

Sister retracts 'honour killing' allegations

“Families often put a lot of pressures on these girls. They promise the world to them. Let’s just hope it is true this time,” said prosecutor Helena Treiberg Claesson to local paper Göteborgs-Posten (GP).

According to Treiberg Claesson, it is not uncommon that girls withdraw allegations against family members in cases such as this, but she stressed that it isn’t possible for them to drop the charges.

The 24-year-old man allegedly threatened to kill his sister, standing outside her door, while carrying a knife strapped to his body, in mid-December.

This was the climax of an extended period of threatening behaviour whereby the man had said over the phone that he was going to “do an honour-killing” of his sister, according to the woman’s previous statements.

The man was subsequently arrested and have been held by police for threatening behaviour and breaching Swedish weapons laws, since mid-December, according to the paper.

However, when the woman faced the court on Monday, she told a different story and said she wanted to withdraw her allegations against her brother.

The prosecutor’s other witness, a friend of the 21-year-old woman who was also in the flat when the man threatened to kill his sister, was also unavailable on the day of the trial, as she is currently not in the country.

The man was therefore released.

He is still under suspicion of the crime, but the court found it unreasonable to detain him any further as he has already spent several weeks in custody and there is no knowing when the trial can resume.

Treiberg Claesson said that she believed she had a strong case against the 24-year-old.

Apart from the statement from the friend, the man also sent a number of threatening text messages to his sister.

Treiberg Claesson is going to argue for a prison sentence for the man. To threaten someone is a serious offence, she said, and the penalty is generally a few months in jail.

“Someone who is being threatened can’t tell for sure if the person uttering the threats is going to act on it or not. When it comes to honour killings we know that there is a real risk that the threats will be acted upon. Many women have been killed. Let’s just hope it doesn’t happen to this girl,” Treiberg Claesson said to GP.

A new trial date will be set for the future, most likely for some time in the spring.

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RUSSIA AND SWEDEN

Swedish rail derailments could be linked to ‘Russian-backed sabotage’

European intelligence services are warning that Russia is plotting violent acts of sabotage in their countries in a concerted effort to destabilise the continent, including covert bombings, arson and attacks on infrastructure, the UK newspaper the Financial Times (FT) has claimed.

Swedish rail derailments could be linked to 'Russian-backed sabotage'

The report comes just days after prosecutors arrested two German-Russian men on suspicion of spying for Russia and planning attacks in Germany to undermine military support for Ukraine. There have been similar alleged incidents in several other European countries.

FT also claims that security services in Sweden suspect that a series of recent railway derailments may be acts of state-backed sabotage. 

It doesn’t mention any specific incidents, but late last year, a fully-loaded freight train derailed on the Malmbanan near Vassijaure in northern Sweden, damaging around 15 kilometres of the line.

Repairs began quickly, but state-owned Swedish mining company LKAB, which uses the line to transport iron ore was greatly affected, with losses of around 100 million kronor per day while the line was closed and a 3.8 million drop in operating profits for the last quarter of 2024.

It reopened on February 20th, but just five days later it derailed again in Vassijaure, this time along a shorter stretch.

Fredrik Hultgren-Friberg, press spokesperson at the Swedish Security Services (Säpo), reiterated to Swedish newspaper Svenska Dagbladet (SvD) what’s previously been said, that Säpo is collaborating with police on the Malmbanan investigation.

“Säpo has an ongoing, routine collaboration with the police force on a number of cases, primarily when it cannot be ruled out that a foreign power is involved. One of those collaborations is on the investigation around Malmbanan,” he said.

Hultgren-Friberg declined to comment on the FT’s reports that Russia is planning attacks on European infrastructure.

“What I can confirm is that Russia is the largest single threat to Sweden,” he told SvD. “We’ve said that for a while. What we can see is more aggressive, risky behaviour from Russia in their illegal actions and spying in Sweden.”

Swedish police and Säpo have previously confirmed that they are investigating the Malmbanan incidents as possible sabotage, which doesn’t automatically mean that they actively suspect sabotage, but is also a routine procedure to facilitate the probe.

Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson told Swedish news agency TT that the reports in FT did not come as a surprise to him.

“Russia is prepared to go further and carry out operations and sabotage on other countries’ territory,” he said.

But when asked whether such acts of sabotage had taken place in Sweden, he said that wasn’t the case.

“We haven’t seen any such signs for now, but we are on our toes. Other countries have seen things where they know or believe that there are such connections,” Kristersson said.

In late April, LKAB said it was so badly affected by the derailments that it may need to close temporarily as it’s not able to get stock to customers quickly enough, so its warehouses are nearing capacity.

“It’s a real worry,” LKAB’s CEO Jan Moström told TT. “If we can’t lower our stock then we’re going to have to start dialling down production capacity.” 

Moström believes that this could affect up to 600 people – half being LKAB employees and the other half being independent contractors.

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