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TODAY IN SWEDEN

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

Social Democrats propose more Swedish and a ban on unqualified teachers in English schools, Prime Minister slams Swedes who defy travel recommendations, and Greens want Sweden to introduce a four-day week. Here's some of Sweden's news on Thursday.

Today in Sweden: A roundup of the latest news on Thursday
Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson at the Almedalen political festival. Photo: Christine Olsson/TT

Social Democrats want to force English schools to hire qualified teachers

English-language schools in Sweden should be forced to hold at least 75 percent of classes in Swedish, according to a new proposal by the centre-left Social Democrats. Note that the party is in opposition, so its proposals are likely to have little concrete impact for the time being (Sweden won’t hold its next election for another two years), but still cover it because it gives you an idea of current political opinion.

Schools with teaching in English are currently required to hold 50 percent of classes in Swedish.

“It should be obvious that the Swedish language enjoys a strong position. Instead we have a school system where a special exemption is granted and English has a special status,” Social Democrat leader Magdalena Andersson was quoted by the TT newswire as saying.

Sweden’s official minority languages wouldn’t be affected by the proposal, nor would it apply to the International Baccalaureate or education aimed at children who are in Sweden temporarily.

The Social Democrats also want to scrap an exemption that means English-language schools don’t have to hire qualified teachers.

The party’s education spokesperson, Åsa Westlund, described it as unreasonable that those schools hire foreign teachers without a Swedish teaching qualification.

Swedish vocabulary: a teacher – en lärare

Swedish court throws out Migration Agency rejections of berry pickers

Stockholm’s Migration Court has thrown out a decision by the Migration Agency to reject 1,278 seasonal permits for berrypickers.

Concerns have increasingly been raised in recent years of the exploitation of foreign berry pickers, who come to northern Sweden to pick berries during the summer season – often from countries far away such as Thailand – but often work hard in exchange for little money.

The Migration Agency therefore argued that based on the working conditions last year’s berry pickers experienced, the employers in question would not this year be able to provide working conditions in line with industry practice or collective bargaining agreements.

However, the court found that reasonable explanations had been presented by employers in the appeal.

“The court finds that the appeal has established the likelihood that employees will be given good working conditions in regards to work hours and salary, among other things,” said Migration Court judge Mats Dahlström in a statement read by The Local.

The court has now passed the case back to the Migration Agency for another review.

Swedish vocabulary: a decision – ett beslut

Prime minister slams Swedes who defy foreign ministry travel advice

In his speech at Sweden’s annual political festival, Almedalen Week, Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson criticised Swedes who travel to Iran.

“It is deeply provocative that people who live in Sweden keep going to Iran, despite the foreign ministry’s strict advice,” he said.

The Swedish foreign ministry currently advices against all travel to Iran, including for leisure, business, work and other visits. That’s the second-strongest advisory on a three-point scale, and it also includes for example people who go to Iran to visit family.

For Lebanon, the foreign ministry’s recommendation is the strictest possible: leave the country immediately.

“This is not a game,” Kristersson said. “My message today is that anybody who ignores strong foreign ministry recommendations not to travel should not count on assistance if something happens.”

Swedish vocabulary: this is not a game – det här är ingen lek

Green party call for four day week

“We know that people are stressed at work and are wearing themselves out,” Green Party co-spokesperson Daniel Helldén told SVT during Almedalen. “We have a high number of people taking long-term sick leave and people don’t have any time with their children or for leisure. So we need to make a change.”

There are a number of outspoken critics of the proposal. The healthcare sector is already struggling to find staff, while others warn that Sweden could lose growth and tax income.

Halldén underlined the fact that the reason there’s a lack of staff in some sectors is due to the fact that people wear themselves out and end up switching career.

“In Sweden, strangely enough, we work more than we did when we cut down to a 40 hour week,” he said. “So we work a lot more than in other countries. And it’s entirely possible to have a system that works and an economy that works with people who can also handle working an entire lifetime.”

The Green Party, like the Social Democrats, is also in opposition, so this policy is unlikely to come into effect any time soon. 

Swedish vocabulary: four day week – fyradagsvecka

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TODAY IN SWEDEN

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

Wife of imprisoned academic 'disappointed' after meeting Swedish foreign minister, one in five young Swedes still live with their parents, Stockholm Bypass to open four years ahead of schedule, and Catholic school told to make prayer attendance non-compulsory. Here's the latest news.

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

One in five young Swedes still live with their parents

The number of young people aged 18-34 who live at home with their parents doubled in Sweden in just one year after the economic crisis brought with it high interest rates and a slow property market, according to new statistics by European number-crunching agency Eurostat. 

The proportion of young people living with their parents had been on a downward curve since 2019, but between 2022 and 2023 it increased from 12.5 to 21.9 percent – more than its Nordic neighbours Finland (16.3 percent – the lowest in the EU) and Denmark (16.9 percent). 

The proportion of young people living with their parents is still lower in Sweden than the rest of the EU, where the average is 49.6 percent.

Croatia is top of the table, with 76.9 percent of its 18-34-year-old population living with their parents.

Swedish vocabulary: young – ung

Stockholm Bypass to open four years ahead of schedule

One leg of the E4 Stockholm Bypass – a massive infrastructure project to build a motorway link which can take cars past the city in a tunnel – is set to open four years ahead of schedule, the Swedish Transport Administration announced. 

A total of 3.5 kilometres of the bypass will open between Häggvik and Hjulsta, north of the city, in the autumn of 2026.

According to the Transport Administration, it will contribute to shorter journey times for drivers and ease the pressure on nearby roads.

The rest of the Stockholm Bypass is scheduled to open to traffic in 2030.

Swedish vocabulary: a bypass – en förbifart

Catholic school told to make prayer attendance non-compulsory

A Catholic school in Lund, southern Sweden, has been criticised by Sweden’s schools watchdog, reports regional newspaper Sydsvenskan.

The school, Sankt Thomas, organises a monthly gathering with prayers and the singing of hymns, led by a deacon. According to the school’s rules, students are not required to pray, but attendance is compulsory unless they can present a signed note from their legal guardians.

But the Schools Inspectorate argues that, according to Swedish law, confessional elements must be kept separate from the teaching.

It has now ordered the school to notify parents and students that attendance during prayer is voluntary.

Swedish vocabulary: a prayer – en bön

Swedish work permits granted to top international talent drop 20 percent

Sweden approved 20 percent fewer work permits for highly qualified workers in January-May 2024 compared to the same period last year.

That includes both first-time applications and extensions, but the decrease can be seen in both categories, according to the Migration Agency’s statistics, reported by The Local.

Sweden defines highly qualified workers as people in managerial positions, occupations with a requirement for higher education qualifications or equivalent, and occupations that require advanced higher education qualifications.

The number of first-time work permits handed to these groups of applicants fell from 4,583 in the first five months of 2023 to 3,415 in the same period of 2024.

In the same category, a total of 6,209 permits were renewed in the first five months of 2024, down almost a fifth from 7,626 in the same period last year.

Swedish vocabulary: a work permit – ett arbetstillstånd

Wife of imprisoned academic ‘disappointed’ after meeting Swedish foreign minister

The wife of an Iranian-Swedish academic on death row in Iran since 2017 said on Tuesday she was “very disappointed” after meeting Sweden’s foreign minister to pressure him to secure her spouse’s release.

Ahmadreza Djalali, a professor of medicine who holds dual citizenship, was arrested in Iran in 2016 and sentenced to death on espionage charges, accusations his family say are utterly baseless.

The doctor, who remains under threat of execution, began a hunger strike on June 26th.

“They told me they are following the case,” AFP quoted his spouse, Vida Mehrannia, as saying after she and her daughter met Foreign Minister Tobias Billström.

“They didn’t clarify anything,” she said. “I’m very disappointed.”

On June 15th, Tehran freed two Swedes, Johan Floderus, an EU diplomat who had been held in Iran since April 2022, and Saeed Azizi, who was arrested in November 2023, in exchange for Hamid Noury, 63, a former Iranian prisons official serving a life sentence in Sweden.

But Djalali, who was granted Swedish nationality while in jail, was left out of the swap.

Swedish vocabulary: disappointed – besviken

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