On Thursday, Sweden officially became a member of NATO. This ended its neutral stance since World War II. The decision was influenced by worries about Russian aggression in Europe, especially after the invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
The Swedish Prime Minister and the US Secretary of State attended an event where Sweden officially joined an alliance. The event took place at the State Department.
“This is a very important moment for Sweden’s history. ” It’s a big moment for the alliance. “This is an important moment in the relationship between Europe and America,” said Blinken. “Our NATO group is now more powerful and bigger than it has ever been. “
“Our alliance to protect ourselves is now even stronger and bigger than it has ever been,” he said, and thanked Sweden for being strong and tough.
“It’s been a long journey, but we always knew we would get here one day,” said Mr Blinken. Nato leader Jens Stoltenberg said that Sweden has strong military and defense industry, making the alliance stronger and safer.
Sweden asked to join a group that protects countries after Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, but two members stopped Sweden from joining.
Hungary’s leader accused Sweden of being unfriendly and put off agreeing until last week, when the Hungarian government finally voted to approve the request.
All Nato countries must support a friend if they are attacked.
Mr Blinken remembered that Sweden has had a policy of not picking sides for 200 years. This changed when Russia invaded Ukraine. He said that the expansion of Nato was not something that was decided in advance or easy to predict.
Mr Kristersson said: “We are not bragging, but we are also happy and pleased. ” “We will do everything people expect. ”
“We share our challenges, duties, and dangers with other friends. ”
He said that the security in the area is very bad, like it was during World War Two. He also said that Sweden is joining Nato for security reasons.
The Nordic country asked to join the defense alliance after Russia attacked Ukraine in 2022. Each person has to agree to a new member joining, but Hungary was taking longer because it accused Sweden of being unfriendly towards it.
Last week, Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban said that the two countries are ready to sacrifice their lives for each other. All Nato countries must support each other if one is attacked.
The Prime Minister of Sweden, Ulf Kristersson, said that it was a very important day and a significant move for Sweden to stop being neutral after 200 years.
“We think Sweden is a great country, but we are joining NATO to better protect ourselves and our beliefs,” he explained.
The president needs to sign the parliament’s approval, and then a formal invitation will be sent to Sweden to join the group of 31 members.
The process typically takes a few days.
Mr Orban is a politician who loves his country and is friends with Russia’s President Vladimir Putin. He has stopped the EU from giving weapons to Ukraine many times.
Sweden is one of the European Union countries that say Hungary is moving backwards on the EU’s democratic rules.
MrOrban’s spokesperson, Zoltan Kovacs, said that officials in Sweden think they are better than everyone else, but their power is weakening.
Last week, Mr Orban met with the leader of Sweden, Ulf Kristersson, and said he supports Sweden being in the group.
On Monday, almost all Hungarian MPs agreed to a vote – 188 yes, 6 no.
In his speech, Mr. Orban strongly criticized some Nato allies for trying to make his government stop the 21-month delay.
Hungary is a free country and won’t accept being told what to do by others, about what decisions to make or when to make them.
Turkey did not agree to let Sweden join Nato because it thought Sweden was helping Kurdish separatists. It finally decided to stop blocking or saying no in January.
Sweden and Finland, who have always stayed out of military conflicts, said that they want to join Nato in May 2022.
Finland officially became a member of the alliance in April of last year, which made the alliance’s border with Russia twice as long.
In 2022, Russian President Vladimir Putin sent his army into Ukraine to stop Nato from getting bigger and make Western countries weaker.
Actually, the opposite has happened with Sweden and Finland joining.
In a widely circulated video, an African woman has emphatically expressed her decision not to bring her relatives to join her in Europe.
She clarified that her choice stems from a concern about being held responsible for the difficulties her relatives might encounter in the country.
She insisted that if her relatives aspire to move abroad, they should take the initiative themselves.
Furthermore, she stressed the importance of respecting individuals living abroad, emphasizing the hardships they endure.
The woman pointed out that many Africans opt to return to their home continent as they find life challenging in foreign countries.
“Me take my relatives to Sweden to be blamed for the bad life they will have here Do you know how hard it is. You have to give respect to those of us who are abroad because we suffer. Have you how many Africans pack their bags to come back to Africa. If my relatives want to come to abroad they should come by themselves. People I will never take to Euroupe are men. Do you know how our men are disrespected here,” she added.
According to local reports, there was a big reaction to the incident. An area of 100 meters (328 feet) around the embassy was blocked off to keep the public safe.
The police told the media that it was too soon to give more information about the object. They said that nobody got hurt.
Ziv Nevo Kulman said on X that we are not scared of terror. He said thank you to the Swedish authorities for acting quickly.
Sweden’s Deputy Prime Minister Ebba Busch said in her own post that she was very upset and scared by the strong dislike of Israel. We need to stop violent extremism.
Police were called around 1:10pm local time (12:10pm GMT), as reported by TV4.
Sweden’s main TV station SVT said that the police with guns went to the place and brought sandbags with them, apparently to help get rid of the object.
The police are looking into it.
The embassy is in a rich neighborhood by the water in the middle of Stockholm.
Sweden and Finland, who used to stay out of military conflicts, changed their minds when Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022. They asked to join NATO for protection. Finland joined, and now all 31 countries, including Finland, have to agree for Sweden to join.
“Sweden joining NATO will make the whole group stronger,” Stoltenberg told reporters. He also talked about his discussions with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban and mentioned new developments in Turkey.
I got a message from Budapest that the parliament will meet again at the end of February. So, we have to wait until then. “But I believe in Hungary and I am sure of it,” Stoltenberg said.
At first, Hungary didn’t explain why they were delaying, and Orban said his government wouldn’t be the last to agree with Sweden. However, the European Commission refused to let Hungary have access to EU funds because they were not being democratic. This made the attitude towards Stockholm become more severe.
Budapest said that Swedish politicians are telling big lies about how Hungary’s government works.
Orban, who disagrees with NATO allies by supporting Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, said on Tuesday that he invited Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson to Budapest to talk about working together on security and defense.
If there is no emergency meeting, the parliament will meet on Feb. for Sweden’s bid. “Please rewrite this text in simpler words. ”
To let Sweden join, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan set some rules. One of them is to take a stronger position against groups that Turkey sees as a danger, like Kurdish militants and people involved in a coup attempt in 2016.
On his own, Erdogan wanted to make a deal with the United States to buy fighter jets. This was also related to his approval of something else.
On Tuesday, Turkish leaders voted and approved Sweden’s request to join by 287 votes to 55. The Turkish government finished the process on Thursday by publishing the measure in an official newspaper.
Stoltenberg was glad that on Thursday night Erdogan signed the decision of the parliament, so now all decisions are in place in Turkey.
Sweden is going to join NATO as the 32nd member after Hungary finishes its processes and the U. Sgets approval from all the other countries. “State Department” can be simplified to “government office. “
Hungary says Sweden is being unfriendly. In March, a Hungarian government spokesperson named Zoltán Kovács said that officials in Sweden think they are better than others, but their reputation is not as strong as they think. Stockholm said Hungary is not following the EU’s rules about democracy.
But, there have been some improvements. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban asked the Swedish Prime Minister to come to Budapest for a visit and talk about how they can build more trust between their countries.
Sweden’s Foreign Minister Tobias Billstrom said he doesn’t think there is a need to talk to Hungary right now, but they can still have a conversation and talk about things in the future.
Turkey stopped Sweden from joining until July, when they finally agreed. On Tuesday evening, politicians voted 287-55 in favor of Sweden being a member. President Erdogan is likely to approve the new law.
Turkey said that Sweden was providing shelter to Kurdish fighters, and they should work harder to stop rebel groups like the PKK, which Turkey sees as a terrorist organization. The EU and US both say the PKK is a terrorist group.
Turkey, as a member of Nato, can stop other countries from becoming members.
Sweden made stricter laws in June to stop terrorism. It’s now against the law to help terrorist groups with money or support.
Sweden and Finland, who were neutral, said they want to join Nato in May 2022. This was after Russia invaded Ukraine. Finland officially joined the alliance in April, making the alliance’s border with Russia twice as long.
The Swedish military gave food and water to around 1,000 cars and trucks stuck in the snow for almost a whole day.
Rescuers are trying to help people who are stuck on the main E22 road in southern Sweden.
Rescue teams helped many people to leave the area and told them to come back to their cars later.
The travel mess happened when the weather got very cold in the Nordic countries.
Very cold weather has arrived in some areas of Sweden, Finland, and Norway. There are also snow storms in Denmark that have stranded drivers on a motorway near Aarhus since Wednesday.
The coldest night in 25 years was recorded at the Kvikkjokk-Arrenjarka weather station in northern Sweden on Tuesday, with temperatures reaching -43. 6C
The problem on the main E22 started at around 09:00 in the morning on Wednesday when snow made the road between Horby and Kristianstad blocked in both directions. Hundreds of cars stopped because of piles of snow.
“It’s complete chaos,” said police spokesperson Evelina Olsson.
Snow ploughs came on Wednesday evening and the police and rescuers worked all night to help people stuck in hundreds of cars. Some people had health problems like diabetes.
Rescue teams started moving cars stuck in the snow on the E22, but many trucks are likely to stay there until Friday.
Erika Sepeliovaite told Aftonbladet website that she, her two kids, and their dog were rescued after 19 hours.
Malin Johansson, who is 56 years old and from Ahus, mentioned that she and her partner turned on their car every now and then to keep it warm. She said to Expressen that they were able to leave at 04:30 on Thursday after rescuers cut the road’s barrier.
Soldiers were sent to bring food and water to the people who were stuck.
Ms Olsson said the problem is that it is snowing a lot and the road gets covered in snow again just half an hour after it has been cleared.
On Thursday morning, most of the cars were moved, but the trucks were still stuck. The police said the situation was getting better, but they also said the road would not be cleaned until at least 08:00 on Friday.
Buses and trains in the Skane area were not running on Thursday morning. Officials said it’s best to only travel if it’s really necessary.
A cable that connects Estonia and Sweden underwater for telecoms has been broken, according to the Swedish government.
The civil defence minister, Carl-Oskar Bohlin, said that the cable was broken but not totally ruined.
He said that the cable might have been broken at the same time as a gas pipeline between Finland and Estonia earlier this month.
Last week, Finland stated that the pipeline was probably intentionally damaged.
During a meeting with the media on Tuesday, Mr. Bohlin stated that the reason for the harm is still not known. Swedish investigators will work together with investigators from Finland and Estonia, he said.
On 8 October, it was found that there was damage to the pipeline that carries natural gas between Estonia and Finland. The Finnish authorities said that both the pipeline and the telecoms cable were broken in two spots.
Finnish sources recently told the BBC that they believe Russia may have caused deliberate damage as a response to Finland’s decision to join NATO in April.
The Russian President, Vladimir Putin, said that the accusation is not true and called it “rubbish”.
Countries near the Baltic Sea have been very watchful for possible damage to undersea infrastructure since September. This concern started when the Nord Stream 2 undersea pipeline was made unusable due to several explosions.
It is not clear who was responsible for the attack on Nord Stream 2, a pipeline that was supposed to carry gas from Russia to Germany but was never used.
Ukraine said it did not do the explosions. Russia has said they did not do it.
At a recent meeting, the Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson cautioned that undersea data cables could be sabotaged.
“There are many cables lying on the ocean floor,” said Mr Kristersson on Friday. He said that these cables are important for our modern economy but they can also be easily attacked.
Sweden and Finland both wanted to join Nato in 2022. However, even though Finland was accepted in April, Sweden has been facing opposition from Hungary and Turkey, causing their bid to be delayed and they are still not part of the alliance.
A person who shot and killed two people from Sweden in a terrorist attack in Brussels has been shot by the police. This ends a search for the suspect that took place during the night. Local news reported this information on Tuesday.
The suspect, whose identity is still not known, was shot in the chest by police in Schaerbeek, a place in the northeast of the capital city. The police then took the suspect to the hospital for treatment. This information was reported by the public broadcaster RTBF.
The person believed to have shot others had a violent attack on Monday night while Belgium was hosting a soccer match against Sweden. The game was taking place at a stadium called King Baudouin Stadium, which is 3 miles away from the center of Brussels. Because of the attack, the soccer game had to be stopped during halftime.
A person on social media claimed to be the shooter and said they were inspired by Islamic State. The Belgium prosecutor’s office said that the victims being Swedish may have been the reason for the attack.
Right now, there is no evidence that there is a connection with the Israeli-Palestinian situation. “We have taken urgent security measures to protect Swedish fans as much as we can, based on the facts and claims,” said spokesperson Eric Van Duyse during a press conference.
Belgian authorities strongly criticized the attack.
“Belgian Foreign Minister Hadja Lahbib expressed shock and sadness over the terrorist attack in Brussels on X” We must do everything necessary to fight against radicalism. We are thinking about the victims, their families, and the police.
After the attack, the level of threat from terrorism in Brussels has been increased to the highest level, which is level 4. The French Interior Ministry has also increased the checks at the border between France and Belgium.
The police were in Brussels to make sure people were safe, according to the city’s mayor, Philippe Close, who wrote about it on X.
Close said that the police are taking action to ensure safety in and around our capital city, Brussels, after the shooting. They are working together with the Minister of the Interior. “I am at the crisis center to make sure everything is working together well. ”
Belgium’s Prime Minister, Alexander De Croo, expressed his sincere sympathies to the families affected by this cowardly attack.
I am keeping a close eye on the situation with the Ministers of Justice and Home Affairs from the Belgian Crisis Center. We are watching the situation closely and we kindly request the people of Brussels to stay alert.
The Crisis Center of the country also shared on X and requested people to not share pictures or videos of the incident, as it would be kind to the victims.
So far this month, 12 people have died in gang violence in the country.
This is the highest number since December 2019, according to Dagens Nyheter newspaper. On Wednesday night alone, two young men were shot dead in Stockholm and a woman – who police said had no links to organized crime – was killed in an explosion at her home about 10 miles from the capital. 50 miles north.
The 24-year-old woman, named by local media as Soha Saad, was a newly qualified teacher and believed to be a neighbor of the blast target.
Kristersson made the announcement after crisis talks on Friday with Swedish army chief Micael Biden, police chief Anders Thornberg and Justice Minister Gunnar Strommer.
He added that the government would ask the military to support the police “in case the specialized skills of the armed forces could be useful”.
“It could be a few things: explosives and helicopter logistics support, analytical skills… Computer forensic analysis.
The Prime Minister added that the country’s current laws need to be changed to deal with “gray zone situations where it is unclear what type of threat Sweden faces”. Swedish media have linked the recent increase in deaths to a conflict involving a gang known as the Foxtrot network, which has been rocked by infighting and split into two rival factions. enemy.
On Thursday, Kristersson said Sweden had never seen anything like it before and “no other country in Europe” had encountered this situation.
Children and innocent bystanders are increasingly becoming victims of this violence, he emphasized.
Last year, more than 60 people died in shootings in Sweden – the highest number ever recorded – and this year the toll looks set to be even greater, if not worse. An official government report released in 2021 indicated that 4 people per million die in shootings in Sweden each year, compared with 1.6 people per million in Europe.
Police say the violence is linked to poor integration of immigrants, the growing gap between rich and poor and drug use.
Mr. Kristersson’s centre-right minority government, which came to power last year with the support of the anti-immigration Sweden Democrats, has so far failed to stop the violence.
He pledged to move towards stricter surveillance, tougher penalties for breaches of gun laws, stronger deportation powers and stop and search zones – with an emphasis on the fact that ” Everything has been considered.”
Some critics argue that these measures do not address underlying social problems such as child poverty and underfunding of community services.
“Tomorrow I will meet the public police boss and the president to perceive how the guard power can help the police in their neutralize the groups of thugs,” Kristersson said in a location to the country on Thursday.
“I trust all gatherings in the Swedish parliament can meet up on the side of major areas of strength for those example breaking moves that should be made.”
The Scandinavian country has been shaken by a record number of shootings this month, in the midst of a spread of group viciousness from bigger metropolitan regions to more modest towns, Reuters revealed.
There were 11 firearm killings in September, making it the deadliest month since December 2019. Police said around 30,000 individuals in Sweden are straightforwardly associated with or have connections to posse wrongdoing, as per the news office.
On Wednesday, three individuals – two men and a lady – were killed in only 12 hours in occurrences connected with group brutality close to the Swedish capital, Stockholm, Swedish police told CNN.
Kids and blameless individuals are impacted by the serious viciousness, Kristersson added.
“I can’t stress enough the way that serious the circumstance is. Sweden has seen nothing like it, no other country in Europe is encountering anything like this,” the Swedish head of the state said.
“We will chase the groups, and we will overcome the packs. We will prosecute them. On the off chance that they’re Swedish residents they will be secured for quite a while in jail and on the off chance that they are unfamiliar residents, they will likewise be removed.”
Two high-ranking officials from an oil company in Sweden are now facing a trial in Stockholm. They are being accused of being involved in war crimes that were said to have been carried out by the Sudanese government over twenty years ago.
Ian Lundin was the boss of his family’s company, Lundin Oil, and Alex Schneiter was his second-in-command in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
They say that they requested the Sudanese government to protect a part of the country in South Sudan where they wanted to work. This resulted in local people being forced out of their villages by setting them on fire and shooting some of them.
South Sudan broke away from Sudan in 2011 and got control of most of the oil fields.
Both Mr Lundin and Mr Schneiter say they didn’t do what they’re being accused of, and they think that the prosecution doesn’t have enough proof to support their case.
According to the AFP news agency, the trial is going to be the largest ever in Sweden and comes after a long investigation that resulted in an 80,000-page report.
Closing arguments are set to happen in February 2026, according to the report.
Three men have been taken into custody for their involvement in a violent protest that occurred after a Quran was burned in Sweden.
There was trouble when an activist from Iraq, Salwan Momika, burned a copy of the important Islamic book on Sunday.
Police arrested 10 individuals for causing trouble in public in the city of Malmo.
A lot of cars were set on fire because about a hundred people came together in response to the fire.
On Sunday afternoon, Mr Momika burned a Quran in Varnhemstorget, a busy square in the city. He has disrespectfully damaged the Quran, during a number of protests against Islam, and his actions have made many countries in the Middle East very angry. A bunch of mad people who were against something fought with the police when they wanted to prevent something from being set on fire.
Police officers said that people threw stones at them, and some protesters even threw electric scooters at their cars.
A lot of police cars were burned in the neighborhood of Rosengard in Malmo. This neighborhood has many immigrants and has had other violent protests before.
“I know that emotions run high during events like this, but we cannot accept disruptions and violent behavior like what happened on Sunday afternoon,” said Petra Stenkula, the commander of the police in Malmo, in an interview with local media.
“It is very unfortunate to see violence and damage happening again at Rosengard. ”
In June, Mr. Momika burned a copy near Stockholm’s main mosque, while Muslims were celebrating a special holiday called Eid al-Adha – a very important festival for Muslims. The Swedish police allowed Mr. Momika to protest because of their strong belief in free speech. Later, it was found out that the incident was being looked into because it may have caused hatred.
In January, Rasmus Paludan, a politician from a Danish far-right party called Stram Kurs (Hard Line), set fire to a Quran book outside the embassy of Turkey in Stockholm.
Denmark, a nearby country that has experienced several instances of the Quran being burned in public, recently stated its intention to prohibit the public disrespect of sacred books.
Sweden has promised to look into the possibility of making it illegal to burn books as a form of protest in some situations.
Despite being a powerhouse in men’s football with a history of global championships and strong domestic leagues, Spain’s prolonged absence from the spotlight in women’s football seemed like an intriguing inconsistency, especially as their European counterparts vied intensely for major titles.
However, on Tuesday, “La Roja” shattered this history of falling short by securing an inspiring 2-1 victory over Sweden, propelling them to the Women’s World Cup final for the very first time.
Previously struggling to even qualify for the World Cup until 2015 in Canada, Spain has captivated Australia and New Zealand with their vibrant style of play, amassing 17 goals and showcasing an attacking prowess.
Their ascent mirrors the resurgence of European football in a tournament that was once dominated by the United States.
As Sweden managed to break the U.S. dynasty in the initial knockout stage, Europe has contributed three out of the four semifinalists, and the continent is poised to claim the championship if England emerges victorious against co-hosts Australia in Sydney later on Wednesday.
Now exuding confidence, Spain holds a belief in their ability to secure victory in the final against any formidable opponent.
“It is something that is fabulous for Spanish football, everyone who’s worked throughout so many years,” said coach Jorge Vilda.
Spain’s women have long toiled in the shadow of the men’s team, whose golden era yielded a 2010 World Cup triumph sandwiched by a pair of European Championship trophies.
“It’s very emotional for me because it’s the culmination of your profession. It’s marvellous to make so many people happy,” said Vilda.
Now the genie is out of the bottle, it may be hard to put back.
Spain have momentum on their side, and not only at the World Cup. Belated investment in women’s soccer is now paying dividends and the future is bright.
Liga F, the top women’s domestic competition, has become a top destination for global talent while Barcelona have become the benchmark in European club football, claiming two of the last three women’s Champions League titles.
Already blessed with world class playmakers Alexia Putellas and Aitana Bonmati, the national squad boasts such depth that even last year’s revolt by 15 players proved unable to derail their World Cup preparations.
The next generation is also eager to make its mark as shown by super-substitute Salma Paralluelo.
The Barcelona winger ignited Spain with the opening goal in the semi-final against Sweden, days after dumping the Netherlands with an extra-time winner.
Though reports of disharmony between Vilda and some of his players have endured through the World Cup, the team have been united on the field and responded well to pressure.
Their ability to score has managed to cover for defensive lapses that have cost goals and for the absence of centre back Mapi Leon, one of the players who refused to reconcile with Vilda.
In beating Sweden, Spain not only eliminated the highest-ranked semi-finalist and broke down one of the world’s most stingy defences, but they also won a new fan in opposing coach Peter Gerhardsson.
“I hope Spain win because I always like that kind of football,” said the Sweden boss.
In a dramatic turn of events, defending champions the United States were eliminated from the World Cup as Sweden‘s Lina Hurtig scored the decisive penalty in a tense shootout.
Sweden secured their spot in the quarter-finals following a resolute defensive display that led to a goalless extra-time draw.
During the penalty shootout, the US initially gained an advantage when Nathalie Bjorn missed her shot and Rebecka Blomqvist’s attempt was saved by Alyssa Naeher. However, the US couldn’t capitalize on these opportunities, with Megan Rapinoe and Sophia Smith missing their targets.
The pivotal moment arrived when Kelley O’Hara struck the post, and Hurtig’s shot was initially saved by Naeher, but the ball crossed the line on its way down, confirmed by goal-line technology. This delay ultimately sent Sweden through.
In the first half, the US dominated play, but goalkeeper Zecira Musovic thwarted Trinity Rodman’s attempt, and Lindsey Horan’s header hit the crossbar.
Sweden struggled to register a shot on target in the opening 45 minutes. The second half followed a similar pattern, with Vlatko Andonovski’s team controlling possession, though squandering opportunities from Lindsey Horan and Alex Morgan.
Sweden nearly snatched victory in the 85th minute when Sofia Jakobsson found space in the box but directed her shot straight at Naeher.
The US almost secured a late winner of their own, with Morgan’s header on target, yet Musovic once again dealt with the danger.
In extra time, the US continued to dominate, but Musovic’s brilliance denied them multiple times. Musovic parried Lynn Williams’ cross-shot and deflected Megan Rapinoe’s follow-up.
Despite persistent waves of US attacks, Sweden’s defense held firm, and Musovic turned away Smith’s powerful angled shot. Ultimately, Sweden sent the US packing before the semifinal stage, marking the first time in history that the four-time winners were eliminated from the tournament at this juncture.
Two guys tore up and set fire to the Quran outside the Stockholm parliament today.
In a video that went viral online that Metro has opted not to publish, Salwan Momika and Salwan Najem, who are both of Iraqi heritage, are seen trampling on the book before lighting it on fire.
The largest mosque in Sweden‘s capital city and the Iraqi embassy both hosted comparable protests this summer.
This is the most recent protest demonstration that the police have authorised in recent weeks, angering Muslim nations.
The two protesters were ready to burn the sacred scripture
In his application to the force, Mr. Najem stated, “I want to protest in front of Sweden’s parliament and demand that the Quran be banned.”
The two men were the only protestors, as they had been at previous demonstrations; a small number of counter-protesters had gathered outside the police barrier.
Although multiple applications for anti-Quran rallies were turned down, courts overturned those judgements, claiming they violated the right to free speech.
Due to earlier protests, Sweden’s diplomatic ties with several Middle Eastern countries have already become strained.
Denmark is thinking about outlawing the burning of the Quran or other religious literature due to security and diplomatic reasons after recent far-right actions.
If it is determined that such protests will have “significant negative consequences for the country, not least with regard to security,” the Danish government said on Sunday that it will look for a “legal tool” to enable authorities to interfere.
Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen said today that “we are signalling both in Denmark and abroad that we are working on it will hopefully help de-escalate the problems we are facing.”
We don’t feel compelled to act in this way, but rather because our political analysis shows that it is in everyone’s best interests.
“We shouldn’t just wait for this to blow up,” someone said.
Separately, this month the Swedish government announced that it was also looking into a related option.
Right-wing parties have opposed the plans in both nations, with some arguing that free speech cannot be restricted.
Tobias Billstrom, Sweden’s foreign minister, claimed to have written to each of the 57 members of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) to clarify Sweden’s freedom to assemble and denounce Islamophobic behaviour.
Meanwhile, Italy, despite a lively start, couldn’t maintain their momentum and will enter their last group match against South Africa with three points.
South Africa and Argentina both have one point each in the group standings.
Sweden’s attacking prowess came to the fore as they created numerous chances and found the net on multiple occasions.
Ilestedt’s partnership with Jonna Andersson during corner kicks proved particularly fruitful for the Swedish team.
By scoring her third goal in the tournament, she now shares the position of top-scorer with Brazil’s Ary Borges.
The game saw Sweden’s cohesive play and clinical finishing, as they capitalized on their opportunities throughout the match.
Blackstenius, though missing a chance to score her second goal, was part of the Swedish domination alongside her teammates.
Finally, Blomqvist’s late goal added to the convincing scoreline asSweden emerged victorious in style.
21-year-old defender from Sweden, Hanna Lundkvist, has been ruled out of theWomen’s World Cup due to an ankle injury sustained during her team’s final friendly match against the Philippines.
The Swedish Football Association (SvFF) confirmed the news, stating that Lundkvist suffered the injury during a closed-door 5-1 victory over the Philippines.
Despite the efforts of Sweden’s medical staff, Lundkvist will not recover in time to participate in the tournament.
“Further examination that we did in the evening unfortunately showed that Hanna won’t be able to take part in the World Cup.
“The nature of the injury means that we have assessed that the time available during the tournament is not enough to get Hanna back,” team doctor Houman Ebrahimi said in a statement on Tuesday.
Lundkvist will be replaced by Linkoping FC’s Stina Lennartsson, who will travel to join the team ahead of their opening game againstSouth Africa in Wellington on Sunday.
The Swedish national radio channel announced on Friday that the demonstration, which involves the burning of Torahs and Bibles outside the Israeli Embassy in Stockholm, had received approval from the government of Sweden.
According to Sveriges Radio, a request to arrange a public meeting to burn the holy books on Saturday has been approved.
In a press release on Friday, the European Jewish Congress (EJC) stated that they “strongly” denounced the Swedish government‘s decision.
“Provocative, racist, antisemitic and sickening acts such as these have no place in any civilised society,” EJC president Ariel Muzicant said in the statement.
“Stamping on the deepest religious and cultural sensibilities of people is the clearest expression possible to send a message that minorities are unwelcome and unrespected,” Muzicant added.
“These actions, based on contorted and specious free speech arguments, are a disgrace to Sweden and any democratic government worthy of the name should prevent it.”
Israeli President Isaac Herzog also condemned the Swedish authorities’ decision.
“I unequivocally condemn the permission granted in Sweden to burn holy books. As the President of Israel, I condemned the burning of the Quran, sacred to Muslims world over, and I am now heartbroken that the same fate awaits a Jewish Bible, the eternal book of the Jewish people,” Herzog tweeted.
At the end of June, a man burned a copy of Islam’s holy book outside a mosque in the Swedish capital, triggering violent protests at the Swedish embassy in Baghdad.
The decision to permit that protest was made in accordance with the right of freedom of speech, Swedish police said at the time.
A police permit obtained by CNN last month stated that the “security risks and consequences connected to a Quran burning are not of such a nature that, according to current law, they can be the basis for a decision to reject an application for a general meeting.”
The permit for the June demonstration said that Quran burnings “mean an increased risk of a terrorist attack” and “can also have foreign policy consequences.”
However, it added that for “security problems to be the basis for a decision to refuse a general assembly, these must have a clear connection to the planned gathering or its immediate surroundings.”
Turkey’s President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has stated that his country will support Sweden’s bid to join NATO if the European Union initiates membership talks with Turkey.
President Erdogan plans to convey this demand at the upcoming NATO summit in Lithuania.
President Erdogan has already informed US President Joe Biden of his intentions regarding Sweden’s NATO membership aspirations. His remarks precede a meeting with Sweden’s Prime Minister and NATO’s Secretary General in the Lithuanian capital, Vilnius.
As a NATO member, Turkey holds the power to veto the entry of any new country into the alliance. Turkey has previously expressed concerns regarding what it perceives as Stockholm’s willingness to host Kurdish militants.
However, President Erdogan acknowledged that Sweden has taken some positive steps by amending anti-terror laws, though he still has remaining grievances.
While Hungary has also been hesitant in supporting Sweden’s NATO bid, it has indicated that it will not further delay the process if Turkey changes its stance.
Jens Stoltenberg, the NATO Secretary General, stated on Monday that there is still a possibility of a “positive decision” regarding Sweden’s NATO membership during the upcoming two-day conference.
He added that Sweden joining Nato would “strengthen our ability to defend and protect not least the Baltic region”.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, meanwhile, has dismissed Mr Erdogan’s idea of a reciprocal agreement.
“Sweden meets all the requirements for Nato membership,” he told reporters in Berlin. “The other question is one that is not connected with it.”
A spokeswoman for the European Commission, the EU’s executive body, said membership to the bloc could only be granted by following procedure.
“The European Union has a very structured process of enlargement and a very, very clear set of steps that need to be taken by all candidate countries and even by those that wish to become candidate countries,” said Dana Spinant.
Over a year ago, Sweden, along with Finland, initiated a bid to join NATO, prompted by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Finland successfully became the 31st member of the alliance in April, after Turkey withdrew objections that were akin to those it currently has regarding Sweden’s application.
It’s worth noting that Turkey’s pursuit of EU membership has been stalled for several years. In 2016, EU members voted to suspend talks on the matter due to concerns over Turkey’s crackdown on dissenters following a failed coup attempt that same year.
Nevertheless, relations between Turkey and the EU have improved since then, with the EU relying on Turkey’s assistance on various issues, including migration.
In summary, Sweden and Finland launched bids to join NATO in response to Russia’s actions in Ukraine. While Finland has already gained membership, Turkey’s objections currently hinder Sweden’s application.
Turkey’s own EU membership process has been suspended, though relations between Turkey and the EU have shown signs of improvement.
Anger following Sweden‘s approval of demonstrators tearing apart and burning the Quran outside of a mosqueWidespread criticism has been directed at the Swedish government’s decision to permit two men to conduct a divisive protest in front of a mosque.
Salwan Momika, who is believed to be an Iraqi living in Sweden, tore pages off a Quran, wiped his shoes on them, and then covered the book in bacon before setting it on fire.
Yesterday, about 200 people observed as another man stood next to him outside Stockholm’s main mosque.
One man was detained by police as he attempted to throw a rock, while others of the attendees screamed “God is Great” in Arabic in protest of the burning.
Swedish authorities granted permission for the protest to go ahead and the burning of the holy Islamic text has been heavily criticised by Muslim-majority nations.
Muslims consider the Quran the sacred word of God and any intentional damage or show of disrespect towards it is considered extremely offensive.
Prime minister Ulf Kristersson said the protest, which coincided with the beginning of one of the most important Muslim holidays of Eid al-Adha, was ‘legal but not appropriate’.
However, a 37-year-old man has now been charged by police with agitation against an ethnic or national group following the incident.
Middle Eastern nations including Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Egypt have voiced their strong disapproval of the protest.
Iraq said it was ‘a reflection of a hateful aggressive spirit that has nothing to do with freedom of expression’.
Demonstrators have also broken into the Swedish embassy in Baghdad following orders from Shia cleric, Muqtada al-Sadr, who called for the expulsion of the Swedish ambassador in the city.
Some protesters were seen climbing over a barricaded wall outside the embassy and were understood to have been inside for around 15 minutes before they left, reports CNN.
Egypt described it as a ‘shameful’ act, while Iran labelled it ‘provocative’ and ‘unacceptable’.
Turkish foreign minister Hakan Fidan slammed a ‘despicable, atrocious act’ and said it was ‘unacceptable to allow these actions under the pretext of freedom of expression’.
Turkey is one of the NATO countries with a say over whether Sweden gains membership but Mr Kristersson said he would not speculate about how the protest could impact the process.
Sweden sought NATO membership in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last year but alliance member Turkey has held up the process, accusing Sweden of harbouring people it considers terrorists and demanding their extradition.
Vedant Patel, deputy spokesperson for the US State Department, said burning of religious texts is ‘disrespectful and hurtful’.
He told reporters at a daily briefing: ‘What might be legal is certainly not necessarily appropriate.’
But he continued to urge Turkey and Hungary to approve Sweden’s NATO status and added: ‘We believe Sweden has fulfilled its commitments under the trilateral memorandum.’
Swedish police have rejected several recent applications for anti-Quran demonstrations, but courts have overruled those decisions, saying they infringed on freedom of speech.
Mosque director Imam Mahmoud Khalfi said he was disappointed by the decision to grant permission for the protest during Eid al-Adha.
He said: ‘The mosque suggested to the police to at least divert the demonstration to another location, which is possible by law, but they chose not to do so.’
Up to 10,000 visitors attend Stockholm’s mosque for Eid celebrations every year, according to Mr Khalfi.
In January this year, Turkey suspended talks with Sweden on its NATO application after a Danish far-right politician burned a copy of the Quran near the Turkish embassy in Stockholm.
A rollercoaster partially derailed in Sweden, resulting in one fatality and four injuries.
Before the tragedy, witnesses said they heard a “metallic thud” and noticed the Jetline ride’s support beams beginning to tremble at Stockholm’s Grona Lund park.
One of the rollercoaster cars was observed leaving the tracks at a ‘high height’ before crashing to the earth.
The attraction, which is used by a million visitors each year, reaches a maximum speed of 56mph and a top altitude of 30 metres.
It’s known among rollercoaster buffs worldwide for having a rare curved lift hill, though it’s not clear where exactly the carriage derailed.
Jenny Lagerstedt, a journalist with Swedish broadcaster SVT who happened to be at the park with her family, said: ‘My husband saw a roller coaster car with people in it falling to the ground
‘My husband, who was sitting outside, saw how a carriage came loose and fell from a great height, and that there were people in it.’
The park was evacuated while paramedics, an air ambulance and fire engines descended on the scene.
Grona Lund’s communications chief, Annika Troselius, said: ‘It is incredibly tragic and shocking. Unfortunately, we have received the news that one person has died and that several others are injured.
‘This must not happen and it should not happen. We are all very taken and shocked and are currently focusing on taking care of all those affected and our staff.’
Local police said they have launched an investigation into the accident.
Beyoncé, widely recognized as the Queen of Pop music, has been implicated as the cause behind an unanticipated surge in inflation that supposedly occurred in Sweden during the month of May 2023.
According to experts and economists in Sweden, the superstar’s world tour in Sweden sky-rocketed the price of goods and services, especially the cost of hotels and restaurant services.
Sweden reported higher-than-expected inflation of 9.7% in May. Inflation in the hospitality industry increased the most.
Touching on the new development, Michael Grahn, a Swedish economist at Danske Bank said that Beyoncé helped drive the jump in hotel rates, she equally is a significant influence behind the unexpectedly strong uptick in recreation and culture prices, he said.
“I wouldn’t … blame Beyoncé for [the] high inflation print, but her performance and global demand to see her perform in Sweden apparently added a little to it,” he wrote in an email to the BBC.
The demand for hotel and restaurant services due to Beyoncé world tour is not exclusive to Sweden, in the UK, reports from the Cardiff Hotel reveal that over 60,000 people including foreign nationals from countries such as Lebanon, USA, and Australia have made demands for rooms tied to the singer’s concert in London. This unexpected situation has compelled local authorities to drive out some homeless families being housed in a hotel by the local council was reportedly booted to make way for her fans.
Beyoncé world tour, the first in seven years is expected to gross over £2bn by the time it ends in September.
A recent internet hoax caused a stir when it falsely claimed that Sweden had declared sex a sport and was planning to host a championship tournament.
Even reputable international media outlets fell for the prank and reported it as true.
One headline from The Times of India, a well-known and respected newspaper in India, stated that “Sweden Will Soon Host the European Sex Championship.”
The report claimed that Sweden had officially recognized sex as a sport and would organize a tournament where participants would engage in daily encounters lasting up to six hours to determine the best in the field.
The alleged competition was said to commence on June 8 in the city of Gothenburg.
Despite the circulation of this claim in various mainstream outlets and their social media platforms, the Swedish sports body has categorically denied the existence of any such event.
Some Pakistani websites also covered the story. A Greek portal even mentioned the participation of Greek contestants in the tournament. The reputable South African media house IOL and a Nigerian website also reported the story.
In its report on the competition, the popular German media house RTL conducted a poll asking users: “What do you think about recognizing sex as a sport?”
But is the story too good to be true? Let’s have a closer look.
Claim: Sweden has formally recognized sex as a sport and will hold its first-ever sex tournament this week.
Fact check: False
“All this information is false,” Anna Setzman, spokesperson for the Swedish Sports Confederation, said in a written statement from Stockholm to DW. “Right now, false information is being spread in some international media about Sweden and Swedish sports,” she added. “These are vigorously denied.”
How did it all start?
Göteborgs-Posten, one of the major Swedish-language dailies, reported that a Swedish man named Dragan Bratic was behind the whole drama.
According to the newspaper, Bratic owns several strip clubs and wanted sex to be classified as a sport. He submitted an application to become a member of the confederation in January of this year. The Swedish Sports Confederation confirmed to DW that there was an individual who claimed there was a sex federation and applied for membership, but the application was rejected in May.
“The Swedish Sports Confederation has drawn attention to the fact that in some parts of the international media news is currently being spread that a sex federation has become member of the Swedish Sports Confederation,” Setzman said in the statement. “It is false information with the aim of smearing Swedish sports and Sweden.”
Another prominent Indian media house associated with CNBC published “details” on how to participate in the event, even including an email address associated with a “Swedish Sex Federation.” Interestingly, a website with that name does exist, but it led to a pornography website with a different URL that is currently running a countdown for the “tournament” and claims that it will livestream the event.
The confederation categorically denied any collaboration with a sex organization. “There is no sex federation that is a member of the Swedish Sports Confederation,” said Setzman.
The so-called sex federation said, “it’s a shame that SSF (Swedish Sex Federation) was not helped by the 2 billion Swedish kronor allocated (by the Swedish government) to registered sports organizations.” Bratic said that despite not being recognized, they would hold a sex championship. In a written statement to DW, his organization claimed, “the Swedish Sex Federation finances the entire European Championship with its own funds and with its own voluntary work.”
Sex is taboo
Sex is a taboo topic for many countries. And Nordic countries are known for hosting some unusual competitions, such as wife carrying and the World Sauna Championship (which came to an end in 2010 after the death of a participant). However, a sex competition is not one of them.
Numerous media outlets from South Asia showed interest in the topic without checking the facts, including this misguided video by the India Today group, another reputable media house.
Other outlets published misleading articles. One explained how knowledge of the Kamasutra, an ancient Sanskrit scripture on eroticism and sex, would aid participants in the event, only to reveal in the last paragraph that the championship was fake news.
The Ghana Harm Reduction Alliance has contributed its voice to the mounting calls for the government to implement strategies, policies, and legislation targeted at dramatically reducing tobacco use and related substance use in Ghana.
According to the Alliance, government can pick key lessons from European country, Sweden which has implemented efforts to becoming a tobacco-free society.
In a statement issued to mark ‘World No Tobacco Day’ held on May 31, 2023, Harm Reduction Alliance stressed on the harmful impacts of tobacco use on human lives and the environment.
It cited the Global State of Tobacco Harm Reduction Report which indicates that about 5,012 deaths annually were attributed to tobacco smoking with approximately 644,429 current smokers in Ghana.
It further reiterated remarks made by the Minister of Health, Kwaku Agyeman-Manu during the launching of the World Health Organization (WHO) Framework Convention for Tobacco Control (FCTC) 2030 project held in Accra recently.
The Minister earlier noted the prevalence of tobacco smoking especially among youth people and cautioned that Ghana was faced with a dual burden of disease with the upsurge of non-communicable diseases such as hypertension, diabetes and a wide array of cancers.
Agyeman-Manu said although Ghana had made significant progress in tobacco control with the inclusion of tobacco-specific provisions in the Public Health Act, of 2012, passage of the tobacco control regulations in 2016 (L.I.2247) and the introduction of graphic health warnings, the country still has a long way to go in the pursuit of attaining a tobacco-free country.
In view of this the Harm Reduction Alliance, Ghana is advocating that Ghana takes key lessons from Sweden to achieve the feat of reducing tobacco use.
“Sweden has achieved the feat of reducing the smoking rate by a whopping 80 per cent despite a 30 per cent spurt in population growth. The Swedes began the journey to a smoke-free society with the introduction of snus, a smokeless oral tobacco product usually held in the mouth between the lips and gums which brought the smoking rate down by 55 percent,” the statement explained.
It further pointed out that policymakers in Sweden had embraced a new generation of alternative risk nicotine products such as vaping and nicotine pouches which had contributed to a decline in smoking rates.
“The effects of these tobacco harm reduction efforts had led Sweden to save more than 3,400 lives yearly. It is projected that; the EU could save about 2.84 million lives should they follow Sweden’s example. Furthermore, compared to the rest of the EU, Sweden has 44% fewer tobacco-related deaths, 41 per cent lung cancer rates and 38 per cent fewer cancer-related deaths,” it continued.
Meanwhile in 2021, the European Union (EU) earmarked the year 2040 for Member States to be ‘Tobacco-free’. This is defined to be a smoking rate below six (6) percent and with two years on, Sweden is on course to achieve a ‘tobacco-free’ society 17 years ahead of the 2040 deadline.
“Sweden’s health authorities had implemented a tobacco control policy for the past 50 years where the traditional tobacco control measures recommended by the EU run alongside an openness to alternative reduced-risk products,” the Alliance said.
“Ghana can adopt and localise the Sweden example by embracing tobacco harm reduction (THR) interventions such as friendlier approaches in regulating reduced-risk products i.e., heated tobacco, nicotine pouches and vapes. This could be implemented alongside the traditional tobacco control measures and education making the country safer for all and attractive to investors,” it advocated.
“On World vape day, Harm Reduction Alliance, Ghana would want to be associated with the comments made by the Finance Minister of Sweden in April 2022 – Mikael Damberg – “Tobacco and nicotine taxes are […] structured today so that products are generally taxed based on risk. […] Products that are judged to be more harmful to health have a higher tax.”
“Harm Reduction Alliance, Ghana would like to urge policymakers in Ghana to follow the science and not to be persuaded to make policies based on morality and ideologies. By following the example of Sweden, Ghana could save lives, improve public health outcomes, and alleviate the burden on healthcare resources” the Alliance reiterated.
In conclusion, the Alliance called for increased education and regulation of traditional tobacco use as well as the provision of safer alternatives.
Harm Reduction Alliance, Ghana is a member of the West African Drug Policy Network and the Ghana Network on Drug Policy Reforms. It advocates for the adoption of harm reduction interventions and provides outreach services for the key population of people who use drugs.
A British serviceman was discovered dead in Sweden just a few days after a military drill.
According to the Swedish newspaper Expressen, the unidentified 25-year-old went aboard HMS Albion during the Aurora 23 defence exercise between April 17 and May 11.
He spent the evening with another Royal Navy sailor in a residence in Solna, northwest of Stockholm, where he was subsequently discovered dead.
Swedish police have arrested four people in connection with the death, including the serviceman he was out with.
Three Swedes in their 20s and 30s were also detained.
Police are still in the early stages of their investigation and have not revealed how the man died.
The Ministry of Defence said: ‘We are aware of an incident in Stockholm and we are assisting local authorities in their investigation. It would be inappropriate to comment further.’
The Swedish Armed Forces said the Aurora 23 exercise was the largest national exercise of its kind in more than 30 years, involving troops from 15 countries.
Four people, including a British serviceman, have been arrested in connection with the death (Picture: Expressen)Pictured: A British serviceman on HMS Albion describes the military exercises taking place in SwedenA serviceman, Andy Osborn, speaks during a tour of HMS Albion
Both the RAF and the British Army were involved in the drills.
Its purpose was to increase the ability to deal with an attack on Sweden, which has been heightened since Russia invaded Ukraine last year.
Before the HMS Albion set sail for the exercise, Captain Marcus Hember, Commanding Officer of the ship, said: ‘Albion and the Littoral Response Group’s last period of operations took us north to Arctic Norway, where we participated in a significant Joint Expeditionary Force exercise.
‘Our next period of operations is going to take us to the Baltic, where again we’ll be exercising with allies and partners and demonstrating the UK and the Royal Navy’s commitment to Northern European security.
‘Albion has embarked marines and a wide range of equipment from 45 Commando as well as from across the UK Commando Forces enterprise.
‘We’re looking forward to getting back out there and showing our commitment to security at this difficult time.’
For the second time Sweden’s Loreen wins the Eurovision Song Contest with her soaring pop hit Tattoo.
In a close vote, the celebrity, who last won the contest in 2012, defeated Finland’s Käärijä.
Mae Muller of the UK fell short of Sam Ryder’s achievement from the previous year, finishing in 25th place, one place above the bottom.
And the Princess of Wales made a surprise cameo, playing the piano with last year’s winners Kalush Orchestra.
Loreen is the only the second person – and the first woman – to win Eurovision twice, following Ireland’s Johnny Logan.
“This is so overwhelming,” she said as she collected the trophy. “I’m so grateful. I’m so thankful.”
“In my wildest dreams, I didn’t think this would happen.”
Sweden’s victory means it will host next year’s competition – on what will be the 50th anniversary of Abba’s historic victory with Waterloo in 1974.
But Ireland crashed out of this year’s contest at the semi-final stage for the fifth year in a row – a result their head of delegation described as “devastating”.
This year’s top three acts were:
Sweden: Loreen – Tattoo (583 points)
Finland: Käärijä – Cha Cha Cha (526 points)
Israel: Noa Kirel – Unicorn (362 points)
Image caption,Kaarija’s song won the public vote, but faltered with juries
Mae Muller only picked up 24 points, leaving the UK near the bottom of the leaderboard. It was “not the result we hoped for,” she tweeted after the show.
“I know I joke a lot but we really put our all into the last few months,” she said. “Congrats to all the countries, I’ll never forget this journey and I love you all.”
Liverpool hosted this year’s contest on behalf of war-torn Ukraine, which won in 2022.
Appropriately, the show began with last year’s winners, Kalush Orchestra, playing an extended version of their song Stefania in a pre-taped segment from Kyiv.
Stars including Joss Stone, Sam Ryder and Andrew Lloyd Webber added a British flavour to the song, as the band boarded a train from Kyiv’s iconic Maidan Nezalezhnosti metro station and arrived on the stage of the Liverpool Arena.
The Princess of Wales accompanied on piano, in a brief segment recorded in the crimson drawing room of Windsor Castle earlier this month.
Image caption,Catherine briefly joined Kalush Orchestra on piano
Back in the arena, Kalush performed their new single Changes, delivering a message of defiance to Russia: “Give my all down to the wire / Set me free.”
It was the first of many references to the war, in a show that took a more political tone than most editions of Eurovision.
Croatia’s Let 3! performed a song that referred to Russia’s Vladimir Putin as a “crocodile psychopath”, while the Czech band Vesna sang in Ukrainian, “We’re with you in our hearts”.
Ukraine’s own entry, Tvorchi, played a powerful song inspired by the siege of Mariupol.
The duo’s hometown of Ternopil was hit by Russian missiles moments before the band took to the stage in Liverpool, officials said.
They eventually took sixth place, with a total of 243 points.
Russia has been suspended from the contest due to the invasion, but organisers refused to allow a speech from Ukraine’s President Volodomyr Zelensky during the show.
Image caption,Israel’s Noa Kirel gave one of the night’s most athletic performances
Elsewhere, Eurovision was Eurovision. There were 80s-inspired tributes to Miami Vice, a ghost story about Edgar Allen Poe and, naturally, a tear-away dress.
But the musical component of the contest continues to improve.
Spain’s Blanca Paloma combined traditional flamenco rhythms with a throbbing electro pulse on the vibrant, urgent EAEA; and France’s La Zarra tied together decades of Gallic music history in the Piaf-meets-Daft-Punk Évidemment.
Acts from Armenia, Poland and Israel – especially Israel – threw slick dance breaks into their performances; while Italy’s Marco Mengoni was accompanied by two gymnasts on trampolines.
There was also the usual surfeit of tortured ballads, both good (Lithuania) and drab (Albania); and a never-ending parade of lyrics about coming together and being nice to your neighbours (Belgium, Switzerland, Australia).
Finnish rapper Käärijä was the runaway public favourite: He received more than double Loreen’s tally in the phone vote. But his chaotic mix of thrash metal, hardcore techno and K-pop melodies failed to impress the juries, who are comprised of music experts.
Image caption,Finland’s Kaarija gave one of the night’s most memorable performances
In a post-modern twist, the competition was bookended by two songs about the process of songwriting.
Austrian duo Teya & Salena kicked off the show with the quirky pop anthem Who The Hell Is Edgar, in which they are possessed by the spirit of US poet Edgar Allen Poe, who compels them to write a song.
An hour-and-a-half later, Mae Muller closed the competition with I Wrote A Song – in which she gets revenge on her ex-boyfriend by writing a song that catalogues his misdemeanours.
It meant the contest opened with the lyric, “Oh my God, you’re such a good writer”, and ended with Muller singing, “Instead, I wrote a song”.
And if that’s not synchronicity, I don’t know what is.
Image caption,The UK’s Mae Muller failed to replicate Sam Ryder’s success last year
The contest was presented by Alesha Dixon, Hannah Waddingham and Ukrainian singer Julia Sanina, with Graham Norton joining them during the voting stage.
The interval showcased the “Liverpool songbook” with tracks by John Lennon, Melanie C and Gerry and the Pacemakers performed by former Eurovision contestants.
And Sam Ryder, who came second for the UK last year, performed an emotional version of his new single, Mountains, with Queen’s Roger Taylor on drums.
Ryder, whose song is about overcoming adversity, was accompanied on stage by dancers who had lost limbs.
How the votes came in
Loreen easily won the jury vote, picking up the maximum 12 points from Ireland, Estonia, Spain, Albania, Cyprus and Ukraine, among others.
She ended the jury sequence with a score of 340, giving her a comfortable 163-point lead over Italy’s Marco Mengoni.
The public preferred Finnish rapper Käärijä, giving him 526 points, temporarily putting him in the lead.
After a tense pause, Loreen reclaimed the crown at the last minute, receiving a public score of 243 that put her back on top.
The UK languished at the bottom of the table, picking up just nine points from the public and 15 from the juries.
Only Germany fared worse. Their glam-rock song Blood And Glitter gained a mere 18 points.
Commiserations came from the BBC, who organised the contest in partnership with the European Broadcasting Union.
The broadcaster’s official Twitter account posted: “Mae, we’re so proud of you and everything you’ve achieved at this year’s Eurovision Song Contest.”
Habib Chaab, a dual citizen of Sweden and Iran who was found guilty of leading an Arab separatist group accused of attacking, was put to death. In order to voice its opposition to this, Sweden has summoned Iran’s acting ambassador.
The Swedish Foreign Ministry stated in a statement on Saturday that “the death penalty is an inhuman and irreversible punishment and Sweden, along with the rest of the EU, condemns its use under any circumstances.”
Chaab was executed early on Saturday due to his alleged membership in the Harakat al-Nidal rebel organisation, according to the state-run media agency Mizan.
Iran considers Harakat al-Nidal to be a terrorist group.
Mizan claimed Chaab was the leader of Harakat al-Nidal and the suspected mastermind behind the shooting attack on a military parade in Iran’s southwestern city of Ahvaz in 2018 in which 29 people died.
Executions have risen in Iran following a nationwide uprising sparked by the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini last September, according to reports released by rights groups.
According to a joint report issued by the Norway-based Iran Human Rights (IHR) and the France-based Together Against the Death Penalty (ECPM) groups revealed at least 500 executions were carried out last year – a 75% increase from the previous year.
The increase was Tehran’s way of trying to frighten protesters and prevent dissent, groups said.
Addressing the 2018 incident, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei accused Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates of financing the perpetrators of the attack and threatened to “harshly punish” the masterminds.
UAE Minister of State For Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash said the accusations were “baseless” and “official incitement against the UAE in Iran” was “unfortunate.”
Nato’s secretary general has announced that Finland will join the Western military alliance as its 31st member on Tuesday.
The invasion of Ukraine by Russia, which Finland shares a long border with, served as the impetus for the application.
Turkey had put off submitting the application because it believed Finland was aiding “terrorists.”
Sweden made a similar application to join NATO in May of last year, but Turkey is preventing it due to related grievances.
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the president of Turkey, has accused it of supporting Kurdish militants and enabling them to demonstrate in Stockholm’s streets.
Any Nato expansion needs the support of all its members.
“We will raise the Finnish flag for the first time here at Nato headquarters. It will be a good day for Finland’s security, for Nordic security and for Nato as a whole,” Nato Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said in Brussels.
“Sweden will also be safer as a result,” he said.
Finland’s membership is one of the most important moments in Nato’s recent history.
Finland, a country with a 1,340km (832 mile) border with Russia and one of the most powerful arsenals of artillery pieces in Western Europe, decided to ditch its neutrality and join the alliance in response to Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Sweden also abandoned a longstanding commitment to neutrality in applying to join Nato, but unlike its neighbour it does not share a border with Russia.
One of Nato’s founding principles is the that of collective defence – meaning an attack on one member nation is treated as an attack on them all.
For Russian President Vladimir Putin, Finland’s accession is a major strategic setback.
He sent his army into Ukraine last year in the expectation it would check Nato’s expansion and weaken Western collectivism. In fact, it has achieved the exact opposite.
In response to Mr Stoltenberg’s announcement, Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister, Alexander Grushko, said: “In the event that the forces and resources of other Nato members are deployed in Finland, we will take additional steps to reliably ensure Russia’s military security.” He did not specify.
Finland will become the seventh Nato country on the Baltic Sea, further isolating Russia’s coastal access at St Petersburg and on its small exclave of Kaliningrad.
Finnish public opinion has been radically altered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Almost overnight last spring, support for Nato membership leapt from an underwhelming one-third of Finns to almost 80%.
Finland’s NATO membership will be approved in a vote later this month, according to a statement released by Hungary’s ruling party on Friday.
According to a statement from the head of the ruling Fidesz Party, Máté Kocsis, the group will vote unanimously in favour of Finland’s bid on March 27.
The group would decide later on Sweden’s request to join the military alliance, according to Kocsis.
Turkey and Hungary have been the remaining obstacles preventing the entry of both Nordic countries; however, earlier on Friday, Turkey announced that it would approve Finland’s membership.
Western officials had generally considered getting Turkey’s blessing the most significant hurdle to NATO expansion.
More background: Finland announced its intention to join NATO in May, along with Sweden, after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine caused a sudden shift in attitudes toward joining the bloc.
That announcement was welcomed by almost all of NATO’s leaders, but under NATO rules just one member state can veto a new applicant’s membership.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan put a spoke in the wheel when he said he was not looking at both countries joining NATO “positively,” accusing them of housing Kurdish “terrorist organizations.”
Friday’s announcement clears the way for Finland’s accession, but Sweden’s application has been stalled by Ankara’s accusations, which Sweden denies.
Sweden will provide 3 billion crowns ($287 million) in new military aid to Ukraine, its largest package of defence material to date, including an air defence system, Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson announced.
Sweden’s previous contributions to NATO, along with neighbouring Finland, have ranged from simple equipment such as helmets and body armour to rocket-propelled grenades and missiles.
“It’s a bigger military support package than all eight previous packages combined,” Kristersson told a news conference. “It’s the single largest we’ve done, and we follow exactly the Ukrainian priority list of what they themselves think they need just now.”
Defence Minister Pal Johnson said the new package of military equipment included an air defence system and ammunition from the stock piles of its armed forces, much needed to defend Ukraine against a fierce onslaught of Russian missiles in recent weeks.
Sweden’s previous Social Democrat government, which lost to Kristersson right-wing coalition in elections in September, had agreed several tranches of aid to Ukraine, both military and humanitarian, worth well over 1 billion crowns.
The Archer artillery system has been high on the Ukrainian wish list for some time but was not included in the fresh aid package, though Johnson did not rule it out for the future and said more support would be forthcoming.
Kristersson also said the government was closely following developments concerning the explosion in Poland near the Ukrainian border on Tuesday and that more information was needed to gain a clearer picture of what happened.
Michael Adomako, better known by his stage name Mike of the award-winning gospel duet Willie & Mike, was ordained and consecrated as a minister last Saturday at the Paintsil & Associates School of Ministry at Hyatt Regency, New Jersey, United States.
Many people in Burkina Faso, South Africa, the Netherlands, Denmark, Germany, Sweden, North America, and other regions of Africa have been moved by his music.
When asked about what being called into the ministry would mean for his music ministry, the successful musician said he sees it not as a setback but as an opportunity to reach more people for Christ via his songs.
Mike has served as a minister for 27 years and counting.
“This honor is humbling to me. Because I know that this is not going to be an easy road, but because I also know that God’s love and mercy will carry me through any difficulty that may arise, I am asking for greater prayers and support and seeking God’s direction.”
Several well-known gospel artists, such as Rev. Graceman, Mary Agyemang, Nana Yaw de Worshiper, the Lord of No Tribe Group, and many more dignitaries from over the globe attended the coronation basically to show their support for their fellow minister friend.
The worship leader thanked God for the day, his family, Apostle Dr. Steve Paintsil, his fellow members of the gospel music community, and everyone who had prayed for him and supported him over the years.
Sweden‘s new foreign minister has ditched its pioneering “feminist foreign policy”, saying the label has become more important than its content.
But Tobias Billstrom said “we will always stand for gender equality”.
The previous left-wing government launched the policy in 2014, becoming the first in the world to put gender equality at the heart of its dealings with other nations.
The self-labelled “feminist government” had ruffled feathers globally.
“Gender equality is a core value for Sweden and this government, but we will not conduct a feminist foreign policy,” he said.
“Because labels on things have a tendency to cover up the content”, he said.
The online web page for the government’s former policy was no longer available.
A former foreign minister, Margot Wallstrom, launched the policy emphasising the importance of the three ‘R’s: “rights, representation and resources”.
Rights to political participation in civil society, economic emancipation and sexual and reproductive rights were just some of the flagship points of the foreign policy.
But the Swedish Gender Equality Minister Paulina Brandberg, from the Liberal party which has previously supported a “feminist foreign policy”, said that “so long” as she remains in post she will “make sure the government’s policies are feminist”.
The radical foreign policy has resulted in diplomatic disputes around the world.
In 2015, Ms Wallstrom’s, remarks about Saudi Arabia’s record on women’s right and democracy led to the Kingdom to recall its ambassador to Stockholm.
Sweden then swiftly ended a longstanding weapons deal with Saudi Arabia after it blocked a speech by the former foreign minister. Saudi Arabia called the remarks “offensive” and a “blatant interference in its internal affairs”.
During Sweden’s time on the UN security council in 2017, it worked to include a resolution that sexual and gender-based violence could be grounds for sanctions.
Swedish membership also encouraged women’s rights advocates from Somalia and Nigeria to speak at the council.
Sweden also claimed that it helped to contribute to new policies on female political representation in Moldova and Somalia, the inclusion of gender equality issues in Colombia’s 2016 peace deal, and also contributed to new legislation in some 20 countries, often related to gender-based violence, female genital mutilation and child marriage.
However the policy was not without its critics. Swedish civil society organisation criticised the former government’s arms exports to authoritarian regimes with a record of human rights abuses.
The new government, backed by a far-right party, also named a 26-year-old climate minister, in the home country of teenage climate activist Greta Thunberg.
The new appointments come more than a month after Swedes headed to the polls.
On Friday, the country’s minority coalition government was announced after Mr Kristersson reached a deal with two smaller parties, the Christian Democrats and the Liberals, despite the Social Democrats (SD)gaining the largest share of votes. However, the left-wing coalition the SD formed with other parties was three seats smaller than the right’s.
The biggest winners in the 11 September election were the far-right Sweden Democrats who emerged as the second-largest party behind the Social Democrats – who have dominated Swedish politics since the 1930s – taking around one-in-five votes. Born out of a neo-Nazi movement at the end of the 1980s, the anti-immigration party entered parliament with 5.7% of the vote in 2010, increasing this to 17.5% in 2018.
While the Sweden Democrats will remain outside the government, they have pledged to back it in parliament to give it a majority in exchange for policy commitments, notably on immigration and crime.
Svante Paabo of Sweden has been named the winner of the 2022 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his research “concerning the genomes of extinct hominins and human evolution,” according to the organisation that bestowed the prize.
The prize, arguably among the most prestigious in the scientific world, is awarded by the Nobel Assembly of Sweden’s Karolinska Institute and is worth 10 million Swedish crowns ($900,357).
Monday’s announcement is the first of this year’s batch of prizes.
Created in the will of Swedish dynamite inventor and wealthy businessman Alfred Nobel, the prizes for achievements in science, literature, and peace have been awarded since 1901, though the economics prize is a later addition.
Sweden has found a new leak in a major undersea pipeline carrying Russian natural gas to the EU – making it the fourth discovered this week.
Denmark and Sweden reported gas leaks in the Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines earlier this week, raising the possibility of a deliberate attack.
The EU blamed sabotage – but did not directly point the finger at Russia.
Russia dismissed suggestions that it had attacked its own pipelines as “predictable and stupid”.
Instead, the Kremlin’s foreign minister said the blasts had occurred in “zones controlled by American intelligence”.
The German ambassador to the UK, Miguel Berger, told the BBC it was clear that a non-state actor could not have been behind the incidents.
The attacks on the pipelines were a classic example from the playbook of a state actor, said the head of Finnish security intelligence service, Antti Pelttari, although he refused to speculate which state it was.
He added that it was “highly likely” that Russia would “turn to the cyber environment over the winter” since Russian diplomats and spies had been expelled from the West after its invasion of Ukraine.
The Swedish coast guard said they had found the fourth leak on Nord Stream 2, very close to a larger leak found earlier on Nord Stream 1.
The EU has repeatedly accused Russia of using gas supplies as a weapon against the West, in retaliation for its support for Ukraine.
It is “very obvious” who is behind the damage, said the head of the International Energy Agency, Fatih Birol, without elaborating.
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said he was “extremely concerned” about the leaks, adding that the possibility of a deliberate attack could not be ruled out.
EU leaders have said any attack on the continent’s energy infrastructure would be met with the “strongest possible response”.
Meanwhile, Norway – which is not in the EU – said it would deploy its military to protect oil and gas installations.
Neither Nord Stream 1 or 2 is transporting gas at the moment, although they both contain gas.
The Nord Stream 1 pipeline – which consists of two parallel branches – has not transported any gas since late August when Russia closed it down, saying it needed maintenance.
It stretches 1,200km (745 miles) under the Baltic Sea from the Russian coast near St Petersburg to north-eastern Germany. Its twin pipeline, Nord Stream 2, was halted after Russia invaded Ukraine in February.
Seismologists reported underwater blasts before the leaks emerged. Denmark’s Defence Command has released footage of the leaks which shows bubbles – the largest is 1km in diameter – at the surface of the Baltic Sea.
And Bjorn Lund of Sweden’s National Seismology Centre said there was “no doubt that these were explosions”.
However, Andrei Kortunov of the Russian International Affairs Council – a Moscow-based think tank – said a Russian attack didn’t make sense.
“They always point finger at Russia but I think since it’s the Russian property it would be not very logical for Russia to inflict damage upon it,” he told BBC Radio 4.
“There are other ways to make European lives harder. They can simply stop the gas deliveries without damaging the infrastructure.”
Hellas Verona defender Isak Kwaku Hien is overjoyed to have received his first call-up to Sweden‘s national team for this month’s international games.
The Ghanaian has been named to Sweden’s Nations League squad, which will play Serbia and Slovenia.
It’s a well-deserved call-up given his impressive displays since joining the Serie A club this summer from Swedish side Djurgrden.
“The biggest dream has been to play for the national team, that’s the dream I still have in my head. I want to play a match in Sweden’s national team jersey.
Then the goal is to play the World Cup and European Championship, but the thoughts have not gone that far yet, but it has been about getting into the squad first,” said Hien to SportExpressen.
The 23-year-old is clear that he has not had time to digest everything that has happened in recent weeks.
“No, not really. The fact that it has gone so quickly has probably made it more difficult. It has gone so quickly from barely playing in Djurgården, to playing, and then a move abroad with the national team at that. The fact that everything happened in such a short period has meant that I haven’t had time to land in any of them, says Hien to SportExpressen and continues:
“I barely had time to land in the fact that you were given in Djurgården, which is a top team in the Allsvenskan, and then a move to Hellas Verona. Now the national team. I haven’t had time to land on it. It was the same with the move to Italy. I probably only got into it after I played my first game. Then it really sunk in, maybe it will be the same this time.”
Hien’s contract with the Italian club runs until the summer of 2026.
Due to a travel restriction, Ghanaian midfielder Kingsley Sarfo won’t be traveling with his Apoel Nicosia colleagues for the Europa Conference League match against Djurgaden.
The former IK Sirius star has been banned from travelling to Sweden for ten year following his conviction in a rape case during his time at Malmo.
The Apoel Nicosia midfielder was jailed for two years and eight months after he was accused of raping a minor.
However, after years of back and forth with the law, the Ghana international was set free and has bounced back to playing football.
He spent the last few years in Cyprus where he has been one of the starts in the Cypriot League.
Apoel will face Djugarden in the first leg of their Europa Conference League on Thursday, August 18, without the Ghanaian.
But Sarfo will be available for the second leg in Nicosia, where he reunites with former trainers Kim Bergstrand and Thomas Lagerlöf.
“There is no difference to facing others, it’s more that you know a little more about a player in the opposing team in that case… but now we go ahead of the events, we will focus on the match tomorrow,” Lagerlöf told World Football Channel.
Sweden face Belgium at Leigh Sports Village on Friday; kick-off 8pm; Sweden are the highest ranked side at Euro 2022, but their preparations have been interrupted due to Covid absences; Belgium came second in Group D after beating Italy in their final group game.
Belgium coach Ives Serneels has suggested Sweden counterpart Peter Gerhardsson could be nervous ahead of their sides’ Euro 2022 quarter-final on Friday.
Gerhardsson has reportedly been reluctant to speak too much about his side ahead of the clash at Leigh Sports Village to prevent Belgium gaining an advantage.
Serneels claims this would not matter as he has already carried out his own research into his team’s last-eight opponents.
“For me not the point,” Serneels told reporters at a press conference. “It is his idea to say what he wants, but I know what we are going to do tomorrow and that is the most important.
Sweden and Finland have the “full, total and complete backing” of the US in their decision to apply for Nato membership, President Joe Biden says.
Both countries submitted their applications to be part of the Western defence alliance this week, marking a major shift in European geopolitics.
To join the alliance, the two nations need the support of all 30 Nato member states.
But the move by the Nordic nationshas been opposed by Turkey.
Speaking alongside Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson and Finnish President Sauli Niinisto at the White House on Thursday, Mr Biden called Sweden and Finland’s applications “a watershed moment in European security”.
“New members joining Nato is not a threat to any nation,” he said. The president added that having two new members in the “high north” would “enhance the security of our allies and deepen our security co-operation across the board”.
Russia has repeatedly said it sees Nato as a threat and has warned of “consequences” if the block proceeds with its expansion plans.
Turkey has accused both Sweden and Finland of hosting suspected militants from the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), a group it views as a terrorist organisation.
However, both Nato Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg and British Defence Minister Ben Wallace have expressed confidence that these concerns will eventually be addressed.
Mr Biden’s comments came as the US Senate voted to approve a new $40bn (£32bn) bill to provide military and humanitarian aid to Ukraine. It is the biggest emergency aid package so far for Ukraine.
The bill – which was passed by the House of Representatives with broad bipartisan support on 10 May – was expected to be passed earlier this week, but was blocked by Kentucky Republican Rand Paul over a dispute about spending oversight.
But the Republican’s Senate leader Mitch McConnell dismissed these concerns and told reporters that Congress had a “moral responsibility” to support “a sovereign democracy’s self-defence”.
“Anyone concerned about the cost of supporting a Ukrainian victory should consider the much larger cost should Ukraine lose,” Mr McConnell said.
Last week, Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin and Secretary of State Antony Blinken urged Congress to approve the package and warned that the US military only had enough funds to send weapons to Kyiv until 19 May.
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky praised the aid package as “a significant US contribution to the restoration of peace and security in Ukraine, Europe and the world”.
The package brings the total US aid delivered to Ukraine to more than $50bn, including $6bn for security assistance such as training, equipment, weapons and support.
Another $8.7bn will be allocated to replenish stocks of US equipment already sent to Ukraine.
Turkey’s president has restated his opposition to Finland and Sweden joining Nato – just hours after they said they would seek membership.
Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the two Nordic nations should not bother sending delegations to convince Turkey, a key Nato member, of their bids.
He is angered by what he sees as their willingness to host Kurdish militants.
Without the support of all Nato members, Sweden and Finland cannot join the military alliance.
On Monday, Sweden said Europe was living in a dangerous new reality, referring to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Russian President Vladimir Putin said the move by Finland and Sweden to join the 30-member military alliance did not threaten Moscow directly – but stressed that any expansion of military infrastructure would trigger a response from the Kremlin.
At a news conference on Monday, Mr Erdogan said Turkey opposed the Finnish and the Swedish bids to join Nato, describing Sweden as a “hatchery” for terrorist organisations.
“Neither of these countries have a clear, open attitude towards terrorist organisation. How can we trust them?” the Turkish president said.
Turkey accuses the two Nordic nations of harbouring members of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), a group it views as a terrorist organisation, and followers of Fethullah Gulen, who Ankara accuses of orchestrating a 2016 coup attempt.
All member states must agree that a new country can join Nato, therefore Sweden and Finland require Turkey’s support in their bid to join the military alliance.
Mr Erdogan said Swedish and Finnish delegations should not bother going to Ankara, Turkey’s capital, to convince it to approve their Nato bid.
His government has also pledged to block applications from countries that have imposed sanctions on it.
In 2019, both Nordic nations slapped an arms embargo on Ankara after its incursion into Syria.
Speaking in parliament in Helsinki on Monday, Finnish Foreign Minister Pekka Haavisto said he was surprised by Turkey’s stance, but added that his government was not interested in “bargaining” with Mr Erdogan.
Finland formally announced its bid to join Nato last week.
It was joined by neighbour Sweden on Saturday in a move that will end the Scandinavian country’s centuries-long military non-alignment.
“Nato will strengthen Sweden, Sweden will strengthen Nato,” Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson said at a briefing on Monday.
She said Europe was now living in a dangerous new reality, referring to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
“We are leaving one era behind us and entering a new one,” Ms Andersson told lawmakers during a debate in Stockholm, also on Monday.
She said a formal application could be handed within several days and would be synchronised with Finland. Nato has signalled its willingness to admit the two new members.
However, Ms Andersson stressed that Sweden did not want permanent Nato bases or nuclear weapons on its territory.
Norway, Denmark and Iceland – all Nato members – immediately said they were ready to support Sweden and Finland by all means necessary if they came under attack.
The UK, also a Nato member, has already given security guarantees to Sweden and Finland to cover the transition period.
Monday’s announcement by Sweden came as Nato began one of its biggest exercises in the Baltic region, involving some 15,000 troops. Named “Hedgehog”, the drills in Estonia involve 10 countries, including Finland and Sweden.
Dutch-born Ghanaian winger Lovette Felicia has signed for Swedish club Karlstad BK until December 2020.
The 24-year-old has been training with the Swedish third-tier club for a week and a half and now the partners have agreed on a transfer.
Lovette signs a contract for the rest of the season which ends in December.
Lovette joins from Dutch club Rkavv where he accounted for an impressive 18 goals in 17 matches.
Following his unveiling, told the club’s website that he is looking forward to the autumn season and that he has felt a warm welcome from both players and people around the club.
Lovette was born to Ghanaian parents in the Dutch town of Den Haag. He is a Ghanaian passport holder.
Much of Europe is still on coronavirus lockdown, with severe restrictions on movement and penalties for those who transgress.
But not Sweden. Restaurants and bars are open in the Nordic country, playgrounds and schools too, and the government is relying on voluntary action to stem the spread of Covid-19.
It’s a controversial approach, and one that’s drawn US President Donald Trump’s attention. “Sweden did that, the herd, they call it the herd. Sweden’s suffering very, very badly,” Trump said on Tuesday.
But the Swedish government is confident its policy can work. Foreign Minister Ann Linde told Swedish TV on Wednesday that Trump was “factually wrong” to suggest that Sweden was following the “herd immunity” theory — of letting enough people catch the virus while protecting the vulnerable, meaning a country’s population builds up immunity against the disease.
Sweden’s strategy, she said, was: “No lockdown and we rely very much on people taking responsibility themselves.”
The country’s state epidemiologist, Anders Tegnell, also pushed back against Trump’s criticism that Sweden was doing badly. “I think Sweden is doing okay,” he told CNN affiliate Expressen. “It’s producing quality results the same way it’s always done. So far Swedish health care is handling this pandemic in a fantastic way.”
Swedish authorities have allowed a large amount of personal freedom unlike other European countries.
Sweden’s actions are about encouraging and recommending, not compulsion. Two days after Spain imposed a nationwide lockdown on March 14, Swedish authorities were encouraging people to wash hands and stay at home if sick. On March 24, new rules were introduced to avoid crowding at restaurants. But they very much stayed open.
So did many primary and secondary schools. Gatherings of up to 50 people are still permitted.
Tegnell defended the decision to keep schools open. “We know that closing down schools has a lot of effects on health care because a lot of people can’t go to their work anymore. A lot of children are suffering when they can’t go to school.”
Elisabeth Liden, a journalist in Stockholm, told CNN the city is less crowded now. “The subway went from being completely packed to having only a few passengers per car. I get the sense that a vast majority are taking the recommendations of social distancing seriously.”
But she added that while “some Swedes won´t even kiss their spouse, others are throwing Easter parties.”
Fresh surge
Much of Sweden’s focus has been to protect the elderly. Anyone aged 70 or older has been told to stay at home and limit their social contact as much as possible. One Swedish government official said that on the whole people supported the government’s approach, but many were “upset about the fact that no ban on visiting homes for elderly was set until recently [April 1], and now the virus is widely spread among these homes, causing the death toll to rise.”
The World Health Organization (WHO) is skeptical of Sweden’s approach. Noting a fresh surge in the country’s infections, the WHO told CNN Wednesday that it’s “imperative” that Sweden “increase measures to control spread of the virus, prepare and increase capacity of the health system to cope, ensure physical distancing and communicate the why and how of all measures to the population.”
Swedish restaurants have very much remained open.
“Only an ‘all of society’ approach will work to prevent escalation and turn this situation around,” said a WHO Europe spokesperson.
Sweden’s “curve” — the rate of infections and deaths caused by coronavirus — is certainly steeper than that of many other European countries with stricter measures. A study by Imperial College London estimated that 3.1% of the Swedish population was infected (as of March 28) — compared to 0.41% in Norway and 2.5% in the UK.
As for deaths, by April 8, coronavirus accounted for 67 fatalities per 1 million Swedish citizens, according to the Swedish Health Ministry. Norway had 19 deaths per million, Finland seven per million. The number of deaths rose 16% on Wednesday.
Some Swedish researchers are demanding the government must be stricter. This week several prominent Swedish clinicians wrote an open letter lamenting that large numbers of people are visiting bars, restaurants and shopping malls, even ski slopes. “This unfortunately is translating into a death toll that continues to climb in Sweden.”
Tom Britton, professor of mathematical statistics at Stockholm University, models how infectious diseases behave in a population. He believes 40% of the Swedish capital’s population will be infected by the end of April. While acknowledging the difficulty of measuring the rate of infection, he told CNN that “my best guess today would be 10% or a bit more” of Swedes currently have the virus nationwide.
Some opponents of the government’s policy fear that reliance on voluntary behavior will cause a much faster spike in cases, potentially overwhelming the health care system. Sweden also has one of the lowest ratios of critical care beds per capita in Europe, and the government official who spoke with CNN said that supplies of protective equipment are only just staying ahead of demand.
In some ways, however, Sweden is better prepared to weather the storm than other countries. Some 40% of the country’s workforce worked from home regularly, even before the virus struck and Sweden has a high ratio of people living on their own, whereas in southern Europe it’s not uncommon to have three generations under one roof.
Emma Grossmith, a British employment lawyer working in Stockholm, says another factor in Sweden’s favor is a generous social welfare net that means people don’t feel obligated to turn up for work if their young child is sick. State support kicks in on day one of absence from work due to a child being sick. “The system here was already well set up to help people to make smarter choices which ultimately benefit the wider population,” she told CNN.
But Grossmith notes a big gap between the way Swedes and expatriates view the virus. “There is a native trust in the system amongst those who have grown up with it. In contrast, many of the expat community feel that the strategy has neither been communicated clearly nor robustly challenged in the Swedish press. They are deeply worried.”
The next month will determine whether the Swedish system got it right.