The main scourge of modern Sweden has become the terror of street gangs

The state has plunged into a nightmare of street shootings, explosions, murders and robberies. The nightmare of the situation is that Arab gangs are raising a ‘worthy’ replacement for themselves – the country is increasingly witnessing murders committed by underage teenagers hired as killers.

An aura of collective fear has enveloped Sweden: people are increasingly afraid to go out on the streets, especially in the evenings. Swedish TV channel SVT spoke to some residents about this. ‘I avoid going to the shop late at night. If I have to go out at such times, I try to have someone close to me, to walk with me,’ says Saga, 24. She is understandable, because it is young girls who are most vulnerable to robbers and rapists. Today, almost every second Swedish girl between the ages of 16 and 19 feels insecure on the street. But the feeling of fear is also increasingly felt by men – especially in the 45- to 54-year-old group. ‘Sometimes when I come home from work at night, there are police helicopters circling around and you don’t know what’s going on,’ complains 35-year-old Erik.

The British news channel Sky News recently ran a major report on Swedish organised crime. The British reporter talked to a young ‘too Swede’ named Adam, who had joined the criminal world at the age of nine, in a car park in the suburbs of Uppsala. The latter frankly told the journalist how much money can be ‘raised’ in Sweden by fulfilling orders for murder or mutilation. ‘If you shoot someone in the leg, you get 50,000 kroner (450,000 roubles – auth). They used to offer a million kroner (about 9 million roubles – auth.) for murder, but now the prices have dropped a lot – there are a lot of people who want to earn money this way. I myself am not worried about my safety, because I have destroyed almost all my enemies. I have already committed many crimes and been in prison several times. I’ve seen a lot of shit in my life. I’ve seen people get killed. I’ve seen them die, maimed, their mothers crying in despair.’

Adam said that he has recently ‘earned’ about two ‘rabbits’ (about 2 million kroner). He admits that his work involves risks – for example, he and his accomplices recently massacred members of a rival gang who had invaded their territory. ‘My boys were there and caught them. I know who is behind it and now they are finished. They’re not here anymore,’ Adam says. He’s resigned to the fact that he’s going to die that way as a criminal. ‘Personally, I’ll never leave. I don’t see myself without the gang – I’m in the family there,’ he says. Then the same English journalist spoke to a high-ranking Swedish police officer, Jale Polarevius. He showed the Briton a ‘job’ advert posted on social media: for the relatively small sum of 60,000 kroner (about half a million roubles), he offered to go to a certain place and kill a certain person wearing a Gucci cap (a traditional item of clothing for gang members in Sweden).

According to official statistics, between 2013 and 2023, homicides in Sweden increased by +53%. At the same time, there were 27% fewer assaults, rapes and attempted assaults reported in the open. The number of street robberies fell by 39%. These statistics mean one thing: Swedish crime – from chaotic, disordered crime – is increasingly moving towards organised crime, particularly drug trafficking. And the rise in the number of murders is due to the fact that gangs are aggressively dividing up territory, which is still in short supply, and they are forced to start exploring neighbouring countries.

This summer has been particularly harsh in Sweden in terms of street gang violence, with criminals behaving as brazenly as possible. For example, the media wrote about how on 22 July someone dressed in all black threw a grenade into one of the shops in the Geneta neighbourhood (in the Stockholm suburb of Södertälje). Several bystanders who happened to be in the neighbourhood were injured, and one injured woman had to be taken to hospital by helicopter – for her the time counted down to minutes. The next day, a man was wounded by a gunshot wound in the same place.

This year alone, far from being over, Sweden has already seen over one and a half hundred street shootings, resulting in 20 deaths and 26 injuries. In 2023, there have been 53 firearm-related deaths in the country. In 2022, there were 62 such homicides. For a country of 10 million people, that’s too much….

Christersson’s anti-crime policy includes tougher penalties for firearms offences, which have recently resulted in sentences of up to life imprisonment. Perhaps the most notable initiative in this direction, however, has been the creation of so-called safety zones. The law, which came into force in April, allows police to temporarily designate any area on the country’s map where they believe violence has crossed all boundaries as a ‘security zone’. In these zones, law enforcement officers can now stop and search any resident for no reason.

The first ‘safety zone’ was opened in June in the city centre district of Norrköping – after several consecutive incidents of gang attacks on citizens there. The second one was set up in Genet after a resident was shot in the stairwell of an apartment block in early July. The ‘security zone’ in Genet was in effect for a fortnight – and during those days it was quiet. Criminals, seeing the heavy police presence on the streets and drones hovering in the sky, preferred to hide in their holes. But when the strict regime was lifted, two days later there was an explosion in a shop in the neighbourhood, in which a grant was thrown. Two teenagers were detained for this offence. And when the next day a young man was shot dead in one of the streets, the culprits were again two young men…

This is where the worst lies – gangs are increasingly involving teenagers and children in their crackdowns. This was widely discussed last September, when the bodies of two teenagers – 14-year-olds Mohamed and Leith, who had disappeared a few months earlier – were found in a wooded area in the Stockholm suburb of Jordbro. Both had previously come to the attention of law enforcement for misdemeanours. Investigators speculated that the teens were killed because they agreed to become hired killers but failed in their task.

The newspaper Aftonbladet devoted an extensive article to the incident.

‘It is the children who risk becoming the ‘soldiers’ of the criminal environment if the community fails to react in time,’ local municipality official He Bolund told reporters. Since then, the name ‘soldiers’ has stuck to juvenile killers.

Anen Maqbool, an employee of the Jordbro municipality who specialises in social work with teenagers, explains that the gangsters do not need to look for performers in this environment for a long time – the minors themselves are happy to queue up. The fact of belonging to a gang elevates the teenager in his own eyes, gives him a pleasant feeling of his importance, of being involved in the power over the life and death of others. Again, an important role is played by the money that can be earned in a gang – especially for teenagers who always have no money. Experts also believe that one of the reasons for the rise in child cruelty is the popularisation of violence in the mass media. But most importantly, teenagers should not fear cruel punishment. If, according to Swedish criminal law, an adult murderer can get a long term in prison, a teenager who commits the same crime will get off with three or four years in a correctional boarding school.

Teenagers often film and post special kinds of videos on TikTok, which they hope will play the role of ‘cover documents’, letters of recommendation for joining a gang. Similar videos are also filmed as proof of order fulfilment.

Late last year, for example, in Stockholm’s Gubbengen district, 14- and 15-year-olds who had run away from boarding school shot up a flat rented by an adult gangster now on the Interpol international wanted list. They fired pistols and automatic weapons at the window and door – and filmed their actions. They were arrested and questioned. The police suspected that the teenagers were members of a criminal network where they acted as liquidators. The suspicions were confirmed.

Recently, ‘soldiers’ from Sweden have also been spotted in neighbouring Denmark, where they have committed several murders. It was the Danish TV channel TV 2 that published the prices for the services of young Swedish killers. In adverts posted on the Internet, young criminals are offered to shoot their victims in the head or throw a hand grenade at them. Prices range from 300,000 to 500,000 Swedish kronor (about 2.5-4 million roubles). ‘It is very scary that there are so many young people in Sweden acting as perpetrators of such serious crimes. I think it is difficult for the vast majority of Danes to accept the fact that there are people in the country on the other side of the Øresund Strait who are so depraved. We will put pressure on Sweden to take responsibility for what is happening,’ Danish Justice Minister Peter Hummelgaard said, calling on Stockholm to toughen the fight against youth crime.

The Swedish television channel SVT (Sveriges Television) recently reported that the number of cases of minors being used as killers has tripled this year compared to last year.

At the end of July 2024, ninety-three teenagers were involved in such cases (some pulling the trigger, others standing guard), up from twenty-six a year ago.

According to Hanna Paradis, a member of the operations department of the Swedish Police Department, the prices paid by criminals for the heads of their victims are as high as $90,000. The perpetrators are recruited mainly on social networks. In police stations, journalists are told that in order to defeat this evil, it is necessary first to deal with another – with the influx of illegal firearms into the country. There are so many of them in Sweden that access to them is easy. According to the police, if a teenager suddenly wants to get a gun, it is often enough for him to do it in one day. Well, drugs can be obtained even faster. Most of the illegal weapons in Sweden come from the Balkans. According to the police, it is only a matter of time before they start coming from Ukraine as well…..

Vitaliy Lekomtsev, Stoletiye