SHARE
COPY LINK
For members

TODAY IN SWEDEN

Today in Sweden: A roundup of the latest news on Monday

Police hunt shooters after teenage boy killed in Norrköping, Swedish government to present new budget proposals today, two held in connection with Skärholmen shooting, and bears are coming out of hibernation. Here's the latest news.

two police officers and a dog
A boy was found with gunshot wounds in the Navestad area of Norrköping on Sunday evening. Photo: Niklas Luks/TT

Teenage boy shot dead in Norrköping

A boy in his upper teens was shot dead in the city of Norrköping, central Sweden, on Sunday evening.

Police were called out to the scene at around 8pm. The boy was found injured and was taken to hospital.

Later the same evening, it was confirmed the boy – who is younger than 18 – had died in hospital from his injuries.

It’s the latest in a series of violent incidents in Norrköping. At the end of March there was a powerful explosion at an apartment building and earlier the same month a person was injured in a shooting in a shopping centre.

Police said they were so far treating the shooting on Sunday as a separate incident, but would look into possible links.

Swedish vocabulary: dead – död

Swedish bears coming out of hibernation

Sweden’s bears are coming out of six months of hibernation, but that doesn’t mean you have to be extra careful in the woods.

“Of course they are hungry when they’ve been asleep for six months. They’re on the hunt for food and probably eat whatever they can. But they’re not aggressive, as long as they are not provoked,” Benny Gäfvert, from wildlife preservation charity WWF, told the TT newswire. 

Unless they are out hunting with dogs, it’s very unusual for people out in the forest to encounter a bear, as bears will normally get out of the way of humans and hide before even being seen. If you’re out and about in a forest where you know there may be bears, make sure you make noise when you walk so that the bear can hear you (and it will stay out of your way), by for example talking or singing.

If you do see a bear, you should speak calmly to make the bear understand that you’re human and not a threat, and walk away. 

If, against all odds, a bear does attack you, lie down flat on the ground with your arms protecting your head and neck.

Swedish vocabulary: a bear – en björn 

Swedish government to roll out new budget proposals

Sweden’s Finance Minister Elisabeth Svantesson is set to present the right-wing government’s spring amendment budget on Monday. 

We already know that the budget contains new proposals for 2024 to the tune of at least 16.8 billion kronor, a stark contrast to last year’s amendment budget – as its name suggest, an “extra” budget on top of the main autumn budget – of only four billion kronor. 

“The fact that inflation is falling means we can start switching to more normal economic policy,” Svantesson told Swedish news agency TT.

She added that she hoped to compensate households – who have been hit hard by raised costs and interest rates in the past couple of years – in future budget bills, to strengthen their purchasing power and ensure that going to work every day actually pays off.

Svantesson will hand the budget bill to parliament at 8am, April 15th, and will hold a press conference after that.

We’ll cover the budget proposals on The Local, and what they mean for foreigners in Sweden, so keep an eye out for articles on our homepage.

Swedish vocabulary: spring amendment budget – vårändringsbudget

Two held in connection with Skärholmen fatal shooting

Two people have been arrested in connection with the murder of a 39-year-old man in Stockholm’s southern suburb Skärholmen last week, a murder that grabbed headlines after it emerged the man was gunned down in front of his son simply for telling off a group of young men.

The people arrested are suspected of protecting a criminal, and the prosecutor described them as young and male.

Politicians from both sides of the political spectrum condemned the shooting, which reignited the debate about how Sweden can crack down on gang crime. It happened before the Norrköping shooting on Sunday and was at the time the 11th fatal shooting in Sweden this year.

Swedish vocabulary: to protect a criminal – att skydda en brottsling

Member comments

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

TODAY IN SWEDEN

Today in Sweden: A roundup of the latest news on Tuesday

Crisis meeting over Sweden Democrat troll farm produces no tangible action, Swedish healthcare strike expands to 29 municipalities, and no interest cut on the cards for next month. Here's the latest news.

Today in Sweden: A roundup of the latest news on Tuesday

Crisis meeting over Sweden Democrat troll farm produces no results

Representatives from all of Sweden’s eight parties met on Monday after a TV4 Kalla Fakta documentary revealed that the Sweden Democrats operate a far-right troll factory to spread anti-immigration content and smear political opponents (as well as political allies, which threatened to spark a rift in the government coalition). It is the only party to make use of anonymous social media accounts. 

But the meeting didn’t lead to an agreement.

The Sweden Democrats announced after the meeting that they planned to continue to use anonymous accounts, and the Liberals failed to win support for a proposal to write a common code of conduct that sets out how the parties are to behave towards one another.

The opposition was critical after the meeting and said Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson hadn’t yet stepped up. 

“We didn’t get anything concrete at all,” the TT news agency quoted Centre party secretary Karin Ernlund as saying.

Moderate party secretary Karin Enström, whose party heads the government, didn’t provide an outright answer to a question from TT about why the Moderates aren’t demanding that the Sweden Democrats remove their anonymous accounts.

“Are we talking about a voluntary agreement or legislation? We’re prepared to discuss both of those issues,” she said.

Swedish vocabulary: a meeting – ett möte

Swedish healthcare strike expands to 29 municipalities

An ongoing healthcare strike on Monday afternoon grew after it was launched by the Swedish Association of Health Professionals (a union representing nurses, midwives, biomedical scientists and radiographers) a month ago in a row with employers over salaries and rotas.

The strike means that those taking part are refusing to work overtime, and there’s a ban on new hires.

It has so far mainly applied on a regional level across the whole of the country, but at 4pm on Monday the action was specifically also expanded to 29 municipalities, including Stockholm, Gothenburg and Malmö.

Healthcare is run regionally in Sweden, but municipalities organise welfare services such as elderly care and school nurses.

The extended strike means that another 5,000 union members will refuse to work overtime, adding to the 63,000 who are already involved in the action.

The following municipalities are affected by the industrial action: Borlänge, Borås, Eskilstuna, Falun, Gothenburg, Halmstad, Helsingborg, Jönköping, Kalmar, Karlskrona, Karlstad, Kristianstad, Linköping, Luleå, Lund, Malmö, Norrköping, Partille, Skellefteå, Stockholm, Sundsvall, Södertälje, Trollhättan, Umeå, Uppsala, Västerås, Växjö, Örebro and Östersund.

Swedish vocabulary: a strike – en strejk

No interest rate cut on the cards for next month

The Swedish Riksbank will not lower the interest rate again at its next meeting in June, its president Erik Thedéen was adamant about when speaking to journalists after addressing an event at the Swedish Economic Association.

Earlier in May, the central bank lowered the policy rate by 0.25 percentage points to 3.75 percent – the first time the rate has dropped in eight years, after a period of eight hikes between 2022 and 2023, where the rate rose from 0 to 4 percent.

But Thedéen was hopeful that Sweden’s “surprisingly resilient” economy is entering a new phase after a few years of inflation.

“Concerns remain, but from an inflation perspective, prospects look much brighter,” he said.

“We are entering a new phase for monetary policy and for the Swedish economy, as inflation is now back close to the [two percent] target, which among other things enables real wage increases.”

Swedish vocabulary: not – inte

‘Reignited conflict’ in Stockholm’s gang world

A man aged around 60 who was shot in an apartment in Flemingsberg south of Stockholm late on Sunday is the relative of a gang criminal, according to public broadcaster SVT’s reporter Diamant Salihu. He was taken to hospital with serious but non-life-threatening injuries.

“There’s a reignited conflict in southern Stockholm,” Salihu told Swedish public radio broadcaster SR. “Positions have to be reclaimed, old conflicts are brought back to life and new alliances are created.”

Early on Monday morning a man aged around 40 was shot dead in Bredäng, southern Stockholm.

Two people are being held in connection with the murder, which according to police has no clear link to gang crime. According to unconfirmed sources in Swedish media, police are investigating possible honour motives.

Swedish vocabulary: an honour motive – ett hedersmotiv

SHOW COMMENTS