SHARE
COPY LINK

POLITICS

How Swedish PM’s public event became a breeding ground for disinformation

Sweden's government described video clips purporting to show Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson saying Israel has a right to genocide as 'inaccurate' and part of a 'disinformation campaign'. And a student was falsely identified as a gang leader at the same event.

How Swedish PM's public event became a breeding ground for disinformation
Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson, leader of the conservative Moderate Party. Photo: Adam Ihse/TT

The video clips in question originate from a question and answer session Kristersson held in Gothenburg on Tuesday when he begins to talk about the Israel Hamas conflict and appears to misspeak.

“Right now, there are circulating clips with inaccurate translations and distortion of what the Swedish Prime Minister said during an open meeting in Gothenburg,” Carl-Oskar Bohlin, Civil Defence Minister, said in a post to X, formerly Twitter.

“The purpose is obvious: To damage Sweden’s image abroad and contribute to further polarisation and division,” Bohlin added.

At one point during the talk, Kristersson begins to talk about the Israel-Hamas conflict, but misspeaks as he attempts to say that Sweden and the EU are “united on that Israel has a right to defence, within the framework of international law”.

However, instead of the word for “defence” (försvar in Swedish), he first says “folk” before correcting himself.

Some in the crowd take this to mean that Kristersson was about to say folkmord, or genocide, which also is similar to the word for international law – folkrätt.

“Does Israel have a right to genocide?” and “we heard it” members of the crowd can be heard shouting.

The whole session has been described as rowdy, with protesters and members of the crowd shouting and interrupting Kristersson during the talk.

Kristersson wrote in a post later on Facebook that the talk had been interrupted by “political saboteurs”, seemingly there only to vent “their anger at the political position of Sweden and the EU on the conflict in the Middle East”.

Sweden’s foreign minister Tobias Billström said in another post to X, that the country saw “hostile actors trying to falsely distort the words of our PM.”

“Do not contribute to this. What he said is that Sweden and the EU stand firmly behind Israel’s right to defend itself,” Billström said.

Bohlin said the narrative was being reinforced by “actors involved in the disinformation campaign related to social services in Sweden”.

In 2022, the country was targeted in a vast disinformation campaign claiming its social services were “kidnapping Muslim children” and placing them in Christian homes, leading Swedish authorities to publicly deny the allegations.

Also after the event in Gothenburg on Tuesday, Moderate politician Hanif Bali took to X, wrongly identifying one of the Palestine activists present as a known gang leader.

The false information was shared by many right-wing pundits on social media, and was printed in the Svenska Dagbladet newspaper in an editorial by Swedish journalist Peter Wennblad. 

The activist was later correctly identified as Bachar Garar, a peace and conflict student at the Linné University without a criminal record or any known links to gang crime. Garar works in elderly care and at a hamburger restaurant, and has previously been on the front page of the Swedish Armed Forces’ magazine Försvarets forum, after doing his military service with the Swedish Life Guards regiment in Kungsängen.

“It’s frustrating that a known politician shares propaganda without double checking his source. At university we have learned to be careful about what information we share,” Garar told the left-wing newspaper Proletären, which was the first newspaper to interview him.

“What he wrote about me harmed my family and myself, people think I’m a gang leader. I am scared that I may be attacked because people think I’m a gang criminal. It damages my reputation at university. I only want justice for my people, like so many others,” he said.

Svenska Dagbladet later issued a correction and an apology to Garar. Bali removed his comments on X, writing that the gang leader did not take part in the meeting and that “being wrongly labelled a Palestine activist is serious. The statement is thus false and deleted”. He didn’t mention Garar.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

POLITICS

Sweden Democrats promise ‘softer tone’ after troll factory sparks right-wing rift

The Sweden Democrats on Thursday continued to hit back at a TV4 documentary that revealed a troll factory run by the far-right party, but promised to adopt a softer tone in social media when posting about its government allies in the future.

Sweden Democrats promise 'softer tone' after troll factory sparks right-wing rift

The announcement came after Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson sharply criticised Sweden Democrat leader Jimmie Åkesson, after the latter referred to the documentary as a “gigantic domestic influence operation” by the “collective left-liberal establishment”.

“It’s a dreadful Americanisation of politics,” Kristersson told the TT news agency, presumably referring to the similarities between former US President Donald Trump and the six-minute video posted by Åkesson in which he launched a verbal attack on Swedish journalists.

The documentary, in which a reporter working for TV4’s Kalla Fakta programme goes undercover within the Sweden Democrats’ communications department, reveals a number of things, including attempts at smear campaigns on politicians from other parties.

It reveals a total of 23 different anonymous accounts spread across TikTok, YouTube, Instagram and Facebook, which are all run by the Sweden Democrats and also spread for example radical anti-immigration views. These accounts have a combined 260,000 followers and published roughly 1,000 posts in the first three months of the year, which were viewed over 27 million times.

In one clip, communications head Joakim Wallerstein tells the group of troll factory workers to “find shit” on the Christian Democrats’ top candidate for the EU parliament, Alice Teodorescu Måwe – despite the fact that the so-called Tidö coalition agreement between the Moderates, Christian Democrats, Liberals and the Sweden Democrats states that they should respect and not attack each other.

The leaders of the other three right-wing parties all called the revelations a violation of the Tidö agreement, but Kristersson told TT that the collaboration would continue, although he added that trust in the Sweden Democrats had been damaged. Asked whether or not it was possible to trust the Sweden Democrats, who until now have consistently denied rumours of a troll factory, he said:

“I can’t answer that right now,” adding “I think there are clear signs that they have smeared opponents.”

Sweden Democrat party secretary Mattias Bäckström Johansson reiterated on Thursday that they consider the documentary an “influence operation”, but promised to adjust some of their posts on social media in the future, specifically the ones that mention the other Tidö parties.

“We are prepared to make small adjustments to soften the tone going forward, so that we can again focus on solving important problems in society,” he told TT, saying that the posts were satire clips spread by two members of the party’s communications department.

He said the pair would be assigned other jobs until they’ve been trained in the Tidö agreement’s so-called “respect clause”, and that the Sweden Democrats had shown the other three parties a list of social media posts about those three parties that they would delete.

But the Liberals said it wasn’t enough and demanded that the Sweden Democrats close down all anonymous accounts, that the four Tidö parties halt all joint press conferences until the EU election, and that the Sweden Democrats commit to following the respect clause.

Representatives of the four parties were set to meet on Thursday afternoon.

SHOW COMMENTS