Latest news – Man dead after workplace accident

Man dies after workplace accident

today at 08.25 Peter Schwartz

A man in his 70s has died after being trapped in an agricultural machine on a farm just outside Växjö.

The police were called at a quarter past nine on Thursday evening.

Relatives have been notified.

Latest news

  • Cyclist and car driver in collision

    A cyclist and a motorist collided in Kallhäll in Stockholm county during Friday morning.

    Police, ambulance and emergency services are alerted to the scene of the accident, the police state on their website.

    The cyclist is said to be awake and able to speak.

  • Flew drones over protected objects

    Two people have flown drones over a protected object in Visby during Thursday evening.

    The police stop a car with the two people. During a search of the car, the police find a drone which is confiscated.

    After an on-site interrogation, they are suspected of violations of the Aviation Act and violations of the Security Act.

  • One to hospital after accident between train and car

    A woman has been taken to hospital after an accident between a train and a car in Götene municipality.

    The accident occurred at an unguarded crossing and the car ran into the side of a passing train.

    The car must have landed on its side.

    The driver, a woman in her 50s, got out of the vehicle on her own and was not seriously injured.

    Earlier in the morning, there was a stop in train traffic due to the accident.

  • Police chased blotters with a helicopter

    Police in Uppsala were alerted yesterday evening that a stripper was in the forest near Gamla Uppsala.

    The alarm came just before 9 p.m.

    Several patrols and a helicopter were deployed in the search for the blotter, but found no one matching the description.

  • Two people hit by hitters

    Two people have been taken to hospital after a traffic accident in Åseda, Uppvidinge municipality.

    The alarm about the accident came at 05:17.

    According to the informant’s information, a motorist had run over two people and then left the scene.

    The extent of the injuries is unclear, but the police are at the hospital to question the men.

  • The payment of the electricity subsidy must be scrutinized more closely

    There are only a few weeks left before the second electricity subsidy to consumers begins to be paid out in Sweden.

    It is about an electricity subsidy of a total of ten billion.

    The payment of the previous electricity subsidy of just over 17 billion has met with a lot of criticism – in this round the payments will therefore be scrutinized more closely, reports Echo.

    Several consumers share electricity contracts between their private households and businesses. This in turn led to the first electricity subsidy going to quite a few entrepreneurs.

    But now Försäkringskassan can demand information about how electricity consumption looked, according to Ekot.

    Consumers thus only receive compensation for the private household’s electricity.

  • Study: No increased risk of menstrual disorders from covid vaccine

    There have been several reports of women who have suffered menstrual disturbances after the covid vaccine.

    The reports prompted the European Medicines Agency EMA’s Committee on the Safety of Medicines to recommend adding heavy menstrual bleeding as a possible side effect last fall.

    It concerned the mRNA vaccine Comirnaty (Pfizer/Biontech) and Spikevax (Moderna).

    But a new Swedish study, published in the journal BMJ, now shows that women who have been vaccinated against covid-19 have not seen a doctor because of menstrual disorders more often than others, TT reports.

    Data from Swedish registers, covering just over three million women, has been examined by researchers from the Medical Products Agency and the University of Gothenburg.

    Women may have had symptoms, but not so serious that they needed to see a doctor, writes TT.

    The EMA also reported in June that it was not possible to establish a connection between mRNA vaccines and menstrual disorders.

  • Over a thousand honor crimes are reported annually

    Several thousand crimes are suspected of having an honor motive in recent years, police statistics show, reports TT.

    In autumn 2019, the police introduced a special badge of honor in their investigative systems. In total, over 1,000 cases a year are estimated to be honor-related.

    In 2020, 1,299 crimes were marked as honour-related, in 2021 it increased to 1,393 and last year the corresponding figure was 1,540, writes TT.

  • Eight dead in Serbian mass shooting

    At least eight people are said to have been killed and ten people are said to have been injured when a man opened fire with an automatic weapon late Thursday near Mladenovac, about 60 kilometers south of Serbia’s capital Belgrade, local media reports according to AFP.

    The shooter is said to have fired his weapon from a moving vehicle, states the state television station RTS.

    The perpetrator has not been caught and a police hunt is underway for him.

    The mass shooting in Mladenovac comes a day after a teenager shot dead eight classmates and a security guard at a school in Belgrade. (TT)

  • Ukraine shot down its own drone

    Ukraine reportedly shot down one of its own unmanned drones after it “lost control” over Kiev on Thursday, according to the Ukrainian Air Force, AFP news agency reports.

    According to the air force, the incident occurred around 8 pm local time. The drone, a Bayraktar or TB2 as it is also known, lost control while flying over the Kiev region. The drone is said to have been destroyed.

    The cause is “probably” a technical error, according to the air force. (TT)

  • Tough on Wall Street

    The leading stock indexes on Wall Street moved lower on Thursday as a result of renewed concerns about the stability of the country’s banking system.

    This is reported by TT.

    The S&P 500 index fell 0.7 percent, the Dow Jones retreated 0.9 percent and the Nasdaq lost 0.5 percent.

    PacWest Bancorp fell 50.6 percent in Thursday’s trading. The bank has been under intense pressure from investors recently after two US banks collapsed in March, while a third was recently taken over by authorities.

    Another bank, Western Alliance Bancorp, plunged 38.5 percent after reports in the Financial Times that the bank’s management was considering selling the business.

  • Person tied up and robbed in his home

    At 18:00 on Thursday evening, the police were called to a residence in Johannelund in Linköping.

    Perpetrators allegedly forced their way into an apartment, tied up the man who lived there and forced things with threats of violence. Among other things, a mobile phone and “personal belongings required for bank transactions”, according to the police.

    The perpetrators then left their victim tied and locked in the apartment.

    The man is said to have finally been able to break free and call for help from the balcony.

    The police have cordoned off the home and started a preliminary investigation into aggravated robbery.

    No one has yet been arrested.

  • Traces of the first stars found

    For the first time, astronomers have found traces of the first stars that exploded in the universe. The great find is based on chemical remains in extremely distant gas clouds, writes TT.

    The stars that formed 13.5 billion years ago contained only hydrogen and helium.

    When they exploded as supernovae, the surrounding gas was enriched with heavier elements.

    From this enriched gas, later generations of stars were born, which in turn scattered heavier elements around them as they perished.

    Thanks to the European Southern Observatory’s (Eso) giant telescope VLT in Chile, astronomers have indirectly succeeded in linking elements to the primordial stars.

  • The Russian threat – if NATO is on Finnish soil

    Since Finland became a member of NATO, the issue of a military base in the country has been discussed, but there is still no proposal.

    Now the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs is warning that Russia may resort to “military-technical countermeasures” if NATO uses Finnish territory. This is reported by the state-run Russian news agency Paw.

    – We follow NATO’s plans for Finland very carefully. We confirm that Russia is forced to take countermeasures of both a military and other nature if there is a threat to our national security, says Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zacharova, according to Tass.

  • Show more posts

    Ask us

    check Ask your questions to the editors here!

    Latest news

  • Isn’t it strange that subsistence requirements for labor immigrants are higher than what a university-educated nurse has in Sweden?

    Jennifer

    Hi Jennifer! Where do you find that number? The average salary is in any case a bit over 30,000 kroner for people between 18 and 24 years old from what I can see Statistics Sweden’s website.

  • Why don’t you write anything about food prices? Are you bought by the food companies?

    The cucumber

    Hello cucumber! We have done that, both here and in Aftonbladet Direkt.

  • Why don’t you write anything about shooting in Belgrade????

    Ana

    We certainly haven’t missed that! Here you can read a whole article about the event in Serbia!

  • Interesting, I had no idea they make champagne in Kalix…

    Always learn something new from you Ab..

    thanks.

    Maat.

    Huh! Don’t you know the famous Kalix champagne?!

    Joking aside. Have changed the notice so that it will be clearer what is meant ;)!

  • What are the rules now with loose dogs?

    Saw on my walk a dog running around in a paddock and a bird flying around and screaming. It probably has young or eggs in the grass.

    Isn’t it tethered now?

    Was it the case that the incredibly obedient dogs are allowed to go loose but then at most one leash length from the owner?

    Want to be able to show the owner the correct letter when it happens again.

    Stephen

    Here can you see what applies.

    Here you can read what the police have to say about the matter.

    And here is a link to the Act on Supervision.

  • Show more posts

    tip us

    full screen Photo: Magnus Sandberg

    check Do you know more? Do you have a news tip?

    check About Tip!
    At Aftonbladet, we are constantly looking for new angles. And as a reader, you are an important part of our news work. With our service Tip! you can easily submit tips, pictures and videos. In our apps, we can also reach you with local push notifications and wanted notices.

    check What happens to my tip?
    We read all tips that are sent. If we judge your tip to be interesting, we will contact you via the contact channels you provided. When you send your picture or film to Aftonbladet, you also give your permission for publication.

    check How is my information protected?
    Aftonbladet guarantees all tipsters source protection, a constitutionally protected right according to the Freedom of the Press Ordinance. All tips are sent encrypted. Your identity is protected with us, but the editors may contact you for further information about your tip.

    If you want to remain anonymous to the editors, there are several other ways to contact us: you can call from a hidden number or email us from a temporary email address, e.g. hotmail or gmail.

    check Will I receive compensation?
    Aftonbladet always pays for published news tips and news images/films that you own or have the right to sell. We only pay to the first person with the tip or to the person who has new information about a news story.

    The decision on whether compensation is to be paid is determined by the acting news director in connection with the tip being submitted. We do not replace news tips retroactively.

    The size of the compensation depends, among other things, on the dignity or how unique the news is and what it adds to the reporting.

    When we request images of a more general nature, e.g. summer images, which are not part of a news report, no compensation is paid.

    When you send your picture to Aftonbladet, you also give your permission for publication/publications.

    check I was promised compensation. When will I receive the money?
    Fees for published news tips, pictures or videos are paid out as salary as soon as possible.

    check Our apps
    Thanks to the location service geolocation, in our apps you can receive push notifications with local news about events right where you are.

    When a major news event occurs near you, a push notification is sent to you when you use Tipsa!

    At the same time, we can call for your help in news reporting. With your own pictures and information – from where it happens, when it happens.

    Aftonbladet’s apps can be found in App store and Google Play.

    check Good to think about

  • A news event can be dramatic. Make sure you are never in the way of emergency personnel or police. Do not put yourself or others at any risk. Consider personal privacy. Do not be too close, but keep a safe distance.
  • We want to publish a good news picture or film immediately. With the help of the app, you reach our newsroom the fastest and your picture or live film can be published on Aftonbladet within a few minutes.
  • General opinions, theories or speculation are not news tips.
  • afbl-general-01