Three people were killed overnight in separate incidents in Sweden as deadly violence linked to a feud between criminal gangs escalated.

Late Wednesday, an 18-year-old man was shot dead in a Stockholm suburb. Hours later, one man was killed and another was wounded in a shooting in Jordbro, south of the Swedish capital.

Early Thursday a woman in her 20s died in an explosion in Uppsala, west of Stockholm. The blast, which damaged five houses, is being treated by the police as a murder. Swedish media said the woman who died was likely not the intended victim and that the target was the house next door.

Swedish broadcaster SVT noted that the two fatal shootings bring the death toll from gun violence in September to 11, making it the deadliest month for shootings since police started keeping statistics in 2016.

  • @[email protected]
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    289 months ago

    While the trend is horrible for my beloved country with crime increasing year over year which is very fucked we need to keep perspective. Sweden has a population of almost 11 million. NY 9 or so. Sweden a given month 2-11 homicides, NY around 30. And there are far worse cities out there.

    We need to get crime down for sure however, we can’t let this become the new normal.

    • @[email protected]
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      259 months ago

      I think it’s not really the volume that’s worrisome as much as the relatively fast evolution.

    • @[email protected]
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      89 months ago

      Yeah, even with gang violence sweden is crazy safe, safer than any US city or even town I can think of.

      It’s so safe people being killed is world news.

    • @[email protected]
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      69 months ago

      It’s almost like strict drug laws are counter productive, and that prohibition gives space for the most violent gangs to thrive

    • @[email protected]
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      49 months ago

      It’s also possible that a large number of murders go undetected. I’m pretty sure there’s a serial killer operating around Trondheim that the police seem to be unaware of. And about 15 years ago there was one in Bergen.

        • @[email protected]
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          19 months ago

          Bergen had a lot of missing persons posters go up for a while and they were all blonde men in their early twenties. I haven’t seen missing persons posters anywhere else in Norway and there aren’t any in Bergen now.

          Trondheim has a lot of drownings. More than Bergen which has a longer coastline and a higher population than Trondheim. And despite the non white population of Trondheim being less than 10% of the total they make up about 90% of the drownings.

    • Spzi
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      39 months ago

      Thanks for putting things into perspective. However, I’m unsure how much sense it makes to compare a country with a city. I guess social dynamics change a bit when population density rises. It’s easier to find groups for fringe activities in cities.

      • @[email protected]
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        29 months ago

        Sure, the Stockholm Region had 38 murders last year. Laredo, Texas, reportedly a rather safe, small, US town of 250,000 had 13 murders. But Region Stockholm is around 10 times that size. So 130 vs 38.

        If we instead compare to Malmö which is the second worst region but much smaller than Stockholm, roughly like Laredo it’s 13 for Laredo and 5 for Malmö.

    • @Gorilladrums
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      19 months ago

      No offense, but this is such a stupid perspective, why would ever compare yourself to something worse? I’m sure Sweden is better than Afghanistan or Nigeria but that’s meaningless because it doesn’t tell you anything. Besides the state of New York has 20 million people, not 9, unless you’re comparing the country of Sweden to New York city, in which case the question is why? Why would compare an entire country like Sweden to a very big city? It sounds like apples to oranges comparison. Also why NYC and not Tokyo or Osaka or Seoul or whatever other mega city that’s safer than Sweden? Why not compare Sweden to other countries that are similar to it like Norway or Finland? Or better yet, why not compare Sweden to itself? Sweden today is objectively more dangerous than Sweden just a decade ago. Comparing Sweden to random places that are more dangerous and saying “but it’s so not so bad, there’s worse” just sounds like a lazy way to ignore and deny the problem which is precisely why Sweden’s crime issue has gotten to where it is.

      • @[email protected]
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        19 months ago

        To something worse because people frame it as Sweden is becoming exceptionally violent which isn’t true. It’s however getting more violent over time with more murders which is horrible and counter to the development in many other western countries. We’re reaching mainland Europe levels when before we were significantly lower.

        It’s also obvious you just read one part of my comment and then ignored the rest.

        • @Gorilladrums
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          19 months ago

          It’s however getting more violent over time with more murders which is horrible and counter to the development in many other western countries.

          That was point. This is what matters. Sweden should be compared to itself or countries on the same level as it. It’s silly to compare it to a massive city that is known for its crime.

          It’s also obvious you just read one part of my comment and then ignored the rest.

          I didn’t ignore it lol. I’m not disagreeing with your take, I’m just criticizing the comparison