21 sep. – talks fail over gang-related crime

pic: the guardian

Discussions between all of Sweden’s political parties – except SD, as discussed in this blog post – on measures to combat rising gang violence has been a hot topic. It’s been weeks. It’s been a couple meetings. And it’s all just ended with the Moderate, Liberal and Christian Democratic parties leaving the deliberations in frustration.

Johan Forssell of the Moderate party has been vocal about his impatience with the process for a while now. On Friday, he said that the government had until Saturday to get its proposal together. Today is Saturday, and the Moderate, Liberal and Christian Democratic parties have now walked because the government’s proposal did not include some of the reforms that they wanted. These included increasing the number of police working on combating gang violence, doubling the sentence for gang-related crimes, getting rid of the youth rebate for offenders under 21 (straffrabatt för unga) and scrapping the “multi-crime discount” (mängdrabatt).

Just as an aside, the multi-crime discount is a particularly interesting Swedish sentencing praxis in which the more criminal offenses committed, the less time is served for the crimes after the first one. For example, say you have committed three crimes of similar severity. You are given the full sentence for the first crime, and the time you serve for the other crimes is reduced. This means that if all three crimes would normally get two years jail time, you would serve two years for the first crime, less than two years for the second crime and even less again for the third crime. If you are of the criminal bent, you definitely want to plan your crimes so that they all come up in court at once.

At some point in history this might have made sense. It’s hard to say. But at this point in history, the Moderate party and several others are saying it’s not making sense anymore.

The government, meanwhile, is going ahead with its own list of measures, being, one must assume, the more low-hanging fruit that everyone agreed on. This list includes things like getting rid of the youth rebate after repeated criminality, giving the police more leeway for reading encrypted communications, increased sentences for conveying narcotics, and increased sentences for gang-on-gang crimes. I’m not making this up. You can read about it in SvD here.

Further, the government has plans to make it easier for the police to get a search warrant for gang-related premises, and to create a national program to help people who want to get out of being in a gang.

It’s possible the Moderate party’s Johan Forssell painted himself into a corner with his ultimatum, and then had to follow up with leaving the negotiations. It wouldn’t have been a big deal to sign off on what they could agree on, and then go on to say that he would have liked a heck of a lot more but that the other parties said no. That would have forced the other parties to explain their no’s, rather than Forsell looking a just a tiny bit pouty. The Center Party chose to stay (just another example of the ever widening split in the former alliance) and looks either soft on the Social Democrats, or smart. Or both.

Thurs. 15/8 – Denmark resists acclimatization

the Denmark-Sweden border
pic: bbc.co.uk

Denmark’s PM Mette Fredriksen announced yesterday afternoon that Denmark may soon be instituting border controls between Sweden and Denmark (). In remarks to the press, Fredriksen said that this latest incident, the large explosion at the Danish Tax Agency where two people were mildly injured, is the second time this summer a Swede has been involved in a serious crime in Denmark. (The first time that she alludes to was in June when two Swedes were killed outside of Copenhagen in a shooting that is understood to have been gang-related. ) There is no way, Fredriksen stated, that Denmark was going to get “acclimatized to explosions,” a sentence that many feel was an intentional jab at Sweden and its surprisingly common crime MO.

Sweden already has border checks by the Danish border in place, but this has been a one-way check, from the Danish border coming into Sweden. The criminal component of what is normally a job-related commute may now make controls mutual. Fredriksen isn’t after commuters, she says, but adds that “it can’t be so that people can travel from Sweden to Denmark and plant dynamite in Copenhagen” ().

The Prime Minister’s comments come on the heels of another testy exchange between Norway’s prime minister Erna Solberg and Swedish minister Anders Ygeman just the other day, regarding whose far-right extremists come from where (see this blog post). Fortunately for Fredriksen, the Swedish reponse was more tempered this time – Sweden’s Minister for Home Affairs Mikael Damberg said he could understand that Denmark would want to protect itself from criminals.

The 22-year old Swede who is in police custody and who is suspected of involvement in the explosion (the other Swedish suspect is still wanted and on the run), has requested that he not be extradited to Denmark, SvD reports (). Reports as to why are sketchy, but his request now has to be handled by the courts, and not by the police. This could take time.

It seems that Swedish commuters will have to be the ones to acclimatize – to border checks.