Tag: Swedish

  • Swedish defense officials warn citizens to get ready for war

    Swedish defense officials warn citizens to get ready for war

    Two important defense officials have told Swedes to get ready for war, which has made some people worried and accused them of being too dramatic.

    Minister Carl-Oskar Bohlin said at a conference that a war could happen in Sweden.

    The military leader, Gen Micael Byden, agrees with the message and thinks all Swedes should get ready in their minds for the possibility.

    However, politicians who are against it have disagreed with how the warnings were given.

    Former prime minister Magdalena Andersson said on Swedish TV that the security situation is serious, but war is not about to happen right now.

    The kids’ rights group Bris said that its national phone line doesn’t usually get calls about the chance of war. This week, many young people called us worried because they saw news or posts on TikTok about it.

    “Bris spokeswoman Maja Dahl told the BBC that this was carefully planned and not something said without thinking. ” “They should have given information for kids when they share information for adults. ”

    The comments from the civil defence minister and military chief are being seen as a strong warning, even though they were very serious.

    After more than 200 years of peace, Sweden is close to joining the Nato defense alliance. It just needs approval from Turkey’s parliament and then from Hungary.

    The leader said what he said was not something new.

    He went to the eastern part of Ukraine a month ago. Sweden is one of the countries helping to train Ukrainian pilots. Stockholm is thinking about sending powerful Gripen fighter jets to Ukraine.

    “I don’t want to scare people. I just want more people to think about their own lives and what they need to do,” said Gen Byden in an interview with Aftonbladet newspaper.

    Finland is now part of Nato, and Russian officials are saying it will be the first to have problems if things get worse with Nato.

    The civil defence minister of Sweden wants people to be aware of what is happening but not to worry too much. He asked local officials, emergency planners, and people to help.

    MrBohlin said he can’t sleep because he thinks things are moving too slowly. He said this at the Society and Defence conference on Sunday.

    The President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky, asked Sweden to work with Ukraine and other countries to make weapons and become stronger together during a conference.

    Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson said that by 2024, Sweden will spend 2% of its money on military defense, which is double the amount it spent in 2020.

    Oscar Jonsson, a defence expert, said that the warnings from defence leaders were blown out of proportion and that 90% of the concerns came from frustration that not enough was being done to improve civil and military defence.

    “He said that time is short and the goal was to urge agencies, people, and departments to take action,” he told the media.

    “The Swedish military is very skilled, but it is not very large. ” The new defence bill says we need to create 3. 5 military units, but Ukraine had 28 when the war began.

    General Byden is telling people to get ready for war, and this comes right after another warning from the head of Poland’s National Security Bureau, Jacek Siewiera, who said that to avoid a war with Russia, countries near Nato should start getting ready for a confrontation within the next three years.

    He said that a report from a German group about preparing for a Russian attack in six years was too hopeful.

    Oscar Jonsson, an expert from the Swedish Defence University, said that for a war to happen, a few things would need to happen first: Russia’s war in Ukraine would need to stop, its military would need time to get stronger again, and Europe would need to not have support from the US military.

    He said that everything was possible.

  • 7-year-old boy perishes after jumping from ferry

    7-year-old boy perishes after jumping from ferry

    A seven-year-old boy has perished in the Baltic Sea after jumping overboard from a passenger ferry.

    In a last-ditch effort to save him, his mother dove in after her and perished as well.

    According to a spokeswoman for the Swedish Maritime Administration, the mother chose to dive into the water after her child on Thursday when he fell into it.

    Both were travelling from the Swedish port of Karlskrona to the Polish port of Gdynia on the Stena Spirit boat.

    Crew issued a mayday signal and reportedly turned round to head back to the scene where they fell.

    Ships and helicopters from Sweden and from NATO units that were in the area assisted in the attempted rescue operation.

    Once found, the 36-year-old mother and boy were transported separately by helicopter to a hospital in Karlskrona.

    Anders Olsson, who was on the rescue helicopter that pulled the woman from the sea, told Swedish radio on Friday that she was ‘not responsive’ and first aid was administered to her.

    Police spokesperson Mariusz Ciarka told local media that it was impossible to save the lives of the two, both of whom were Polish citizens.

    He said: ‘Unfortunately, in the morning we received information from the Swedish side that we have to pass on this terrible news to the family, because both the boy and the woman are dead.’

    The boy fell from a height of about 20 meters – 65 feet – off the Stena Line ferry, it has been reported.

    ‘At the moment we have no information whether this was due to a malfunction of the ferry,’ Stena Line spokesperson Agnieszka Zembrzycka told TVN 24.

    ‘We are cooperating with the police and other authorities that are appointed to explain the causes and circumstances of this event.’

    Swedish police issued an appeal to Polish passengers via Poland’s state-run news agency PAP asking for information that could explain how the accident occurred.

  • Police detain and transport Greta Thunberg

    Police detain and transport Greta Thunberg

    Police in Norway detained environmental activist Greta Thunberg during a demonstration for indigenous rights.

    After her appearance at a march in Germany in January against the construction of a coal mine, the Swedish activist has been photographed being dragged away by police twice in the past two months.

    Following today’s protest in Oslo, Greta and the other participants were briefly detained before being released. She was holding a red, blue, yellow, and green Sámi flag.

    The demonstrators were calling for the removal of wind turbines from reindeer pastures on land belonging to the Sámi, an indigenous group living in central and northern Norway, Sweden and Finland, as well as parts of Russia.

    Supporters say the transition to green energy should not come at the expense of Sámi rights.

    In 2021, Norway’s supreme court ruled that two wind farms at Fosen, near Trondheim, violated the indigenous people’s rights under international conventions.

    However, the turbines remain in operation 16 months later.

    Reindeer herders say the sight and sound of the giant machinery frighten their animals.

    In recent days, Greta joined protestors blocking access to some government buildings.

    Swedish activist Greta Thunberg is carried away during a protest outside the Norwegian Ministry of Finance, in Oslo
    Greta Thunberg joined other protestors who blocked access to the energy ministry building yesterday (Picture: AP)
    Swedish activist Greta Thunberg is carried away during a protest outside the Norwegian Ministry of Finance, in Oslo
    The activist was briefly detained by Norwegian police before she was released (Picture: EPA)

    The increased focus on the issue led the energy minister Terje Aasland decided to call off an official visit to the UK.

    In an interview with Reuters yesterday, Greta said: ‘Indigenous rights, human rights, must go hand-in-hand with climate protection and climate action.

    ‘That can’t happen at the expense of some people. Then it is not climate justice.’

    The images of the 20-year-old being lifted by police echoed January’s protest at Luetzerath, near Dusseldorf.

    Demonstrators gathered at the abandoned German village to try and prevent the expansion of the Garzweiler coal mine by energy company RWE.