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daneriksson / Dan Eriksson
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2025-01-26 08:14:26

daneriksson on Nostr: Another night, another explosion—this time in Enskededalen. In the early hours of ...

Another night, another explosion—this time in Enskededalen.

In the early hours of Sunday, a powerful blast shattered the entrance of an apartment building in southern Stockholm. Windows were blown out, and panic spread through the neighborhood. This marks the 26th explosion in Sweden so far this year—a grim reality becoming all too familiar.

The police response was swift, deploying helicopters, canine units, and bomb squads to secure the area. By 5:20 a.m., a suspect had been apprehended: a 16-year-old who had absconded from a state-run youth facility. Previously convicted of multiple crimes, he had been under a sentence of youth surveillance—a punishment that clearly did little to deter his actions.

While no injuries were reported, the damage is extensive, and the psychological toll on the community is immeasurable. Yet, this case stands out—not for the crime itself but for the rare success of a quick arrest. Still, one has to ask: will this arrest lead to meaningful change, or is it just another cog in Sweden's failing justice system?

When will Sweden’s leaders stop managing symptoms and start addressing the disease? These bombings are not isolated acts but the result of years of political negligence and a refusal to confront the escalating gang culture that fuels them—a culture that is itself the product of over 50 years of reckless "multicultural" policies. Policies that have transformed Sweden from a cohesive Scandinavian society into a fragmented state, where some neighborhoods resemble conflict zones in the Middle East and Africa more than peaceful Northern Europe.

#sweden #news #crime
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