Abuse at school – the police on the scene

THREE NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS:

  • Abuse at school – the police on the scene

    The police are on the scene at a school in Linköping after an alarm about an assault, the police say.

    – It is some kind of abuse case at a school. I don’t have much information and the people involved are very young, says Angelica Forsberg.

    The police are otherwise tight-lipped about the matter.

    – Now it’s about gathering information and seeing what has happened. If it is an accident and if it is a crime, says Angelica Forsberg.

    The alarm came in to the police at 12:31.

  • THREE NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS

  • 200 pigs trapped in burning barn

    Photo: Jan Emanuelsson/Topnews.se

    A fire has started in a stable in Åstorp. There are 200 pigs in there, according to Helsingborgs-Dagblad.

    According to the newspaper, the building is on fire and cars from five different stations have been called to the scene. There must also be a risk of spread.

  • Turkey signs new gas agreement with Shell

    Turkey’s state gas company Botas and the energy group Shell have signed a ten-year agreement on deliveries of liquefied fossil gas (LNG), which may also be resold from Turkey to Europe.

    According to the agreement, Shell must supply the equivalent of four billion cubic meters of LNG per year starting in 2027, according to Turkey’s Energy Minister Alparslan Bayraktar. This corresponds to around 8 percent of Turkey’s total gas consumption in 2023.

    Before the Shell deliveries, Botas takes in fossil gas via pipelines from Russia, Azerbaijan and Iran and in LNG form from Algeria and the USA.

    In May, Botas signed a similar ten-year agreement with the American energy group Exxon Mobil for LNG deliveries.

    Last year, Russia accounted for about 40 percent of the gas imported by Turkey, a share that is expected to decrease with the new agreements with Shell and Exxon Mobil.

  • Four convicted of drug offences

    Three people who were accused of particularly serious drug offenses have been sentenced in Södertörn District Court. Another person who was charged is sentenced for aiding and abetting an extremely serious drug crime and minor drug crime.

    Three of the convicts had handled 30 kilos of cocaine, the district court writes in a press release.

    All are sentenced to prison for varying lengths of time.

    One of those convicted of a serious drug offense receives eight years in prison. A second gets eight years and eleven months in prison. A third had been sentenced by the Värmland district court earlier this summer to ten years in prison for serious drug activity. Because of that, he is sentenced by the Södertörn district court to two years and eleven months.

    The fourth person charged with aiding and abetting was sentenced to four years in prison.

  • Another arrested in Malmö murder

    Another person has been suspected of the murder of two British men in Malmö earlier this summer, reports Sydsvenskan. Previously, one person was arrested.

    The two men were found dead in a burned-out car in mid-July.

    Person arrested this morning.

  • Electricity price lowest since 2000

    Eight cents. Electricity prices have not been this low for a month since 2000.

    It also currently looks promising for autumn and winter.

    With the exception of southernmost Sweden, electricity customers in other parts of the country could enjoy unusually low prices. On average, the electricity price landed at 8.5 öre per kilowatt hour (kwh) during August, according to the Nord Pool electricity exchange. According to Vattenfall, it is the lowest since August 2000.

    Favorable weather is the main explanation, sunny, windy and warm.

    In Southern Sweden (electricity area 4), the August price was significantly higher, 46 öre/kwh.

    Even into September, things look favorable for electricity buyers, price-wise. Still high temperatures and normal levels in the water reservoir speak for it. In the financial electricity market, future electricity contracts are traded on Nasdaq’s commodity exchange for the fourth quarter at a prVisa more

  • Two to hospital after traffic accident

    The police have been alerted to a traffic accident in Lund. A car and truck are said to have collided.

    Two people are taken to hospital by ambulance.

    Police remain at the scene to manage traffic.

  • Suspected dangerous object – the district court is evacuated

    Parts of the district court in Gothenburg are being evacuated and courtrooms are being occupied, according to the police.

    This is because a suspected dangerous object was found in a person’s bag at the security check. The police are trying to find out what kind of object it is.

    National bomb protection is notified.

    An area around the district court has been cordoned off. Above all, the stretch between old Ullevi and Skånegatan. Car traffic as well as pedestrian and bicycle traffic is affected.

    Read more here.

  • Finland wants to ban Russian property purchases

    Finnish Defense Minister Antti Häkkänen wants to be able to stop Russian property purchases in Finland. Archive photography Photo: Heiko Junge NTB/TT

    The Finnish government has drawn up a proposal that would in practice mean a ban on Russian citizens and various types of organizations from Russia buying real estate in Finland, according to a press release from the country’s Ministry of Defence.

    The proposal is now being sent out for consultation, and the government hopes to be able to present a clear bill to the Riksdag in Helsinki already this year.

    “We must identify and in advance neutralize such risks that, if they materialize in times of crisis, could seriously endanger society’s ability to function and the safety of the population,” says Finnish Defense Minister Antti Häkkänen, according to the press release.

    The proposal is to introduce a ban on persons or associations that have been found by the EU to violate the territorial integrity, sovereignty and independence of another state and whose home country may pose a threat to Finland’s national security.

  • Tent set up at university – police on site

    People have set up a tent at Stockholm University. The police are on the scene to investigate what it is about.

    – We received information that there were some people who set up some kind of tent. We have a resource there that investigates a little more what it is about, that is what I can say at the moment, says Anna Westberg, at the Stockholm Police.

  • The luxury yacht’s captain refuses to answer – silent in interrogation

    Seven people were swept into the sea when the Bayesian sank. Photo: Salvatore Cavalli/AP/TT

    The captain of the sunken luxury yacht in Italy refuses to answer the police’s questions. Since he was served with suspicion of crime, he has been silent.

    The captain, New Zealander James Cutfield, is suspected of crimes in connection with the shipwreck in August, along with two others from the crew, but has so far chosen to use his right not to talk during interrogations, writes La Stampa.

    According to Cutfield’s lawyers, he is too tired, and needs “a complete and accurate line of defense that requires data and information that we do not yet have.”

    According to relatives, he has repeatedly said that he did everything to save the people on board, but he has also been accused of abandoning ship.

    When the over 50 meter long luxury yacht Bayesian sank off Sicily on August 19, there were about 20 people on board. It filled with water in less than a quarter of an hour and seven people died, including IT tycoon Mike Lynch and his daughter.

  • Woman found dead – suspect set at large

    A 25-year-old woman was found dead in an apartment in Umeå on Saturday and a 40-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of murder.

    It is about a man who was also in the apartment. The man was arrested on Saturday morning by a prosecutor, reasonably suspected of murder, but was released on Sunday.

    – There are still suspicions against him at the lower level of suspicion. He was set free as it is considered that such investigative measures have been carried out that there is no longer any danger of collision, says Anna Nilsson, assistant prosecutor, to SVT Nyheter Västerbotten.

  • Tiger bites attendant on arm – ‘puncture wound’

    File photo of another Sumatran tiger, at a zoo in Rome. Photo: Gregorio Borgia/AP/TT

    A zookeeper has been attacked by a tiger at an amusement park in Australia.

    The 47-year-old female attendant, described as experienced with tigers, was bitten on the arm and suffered serious lacerations and puncture wounds.

    Staff at Dreamworld in the capital Canberra managed to stop the bleeding before the attendant was taken to hospital. Her condition is said to be stable.

    The theme park has nine tigers of the Sumatran tiger and Bengal tiger species.

    The attack is described as an “isolated and unusual” incident that will be investigated.

  • E4 was closed after crash

    A truck and a car have collided on the E4 at the height of Sävar outside Umeå, reports Västerbotten-Kuriren.

    The road was closed in both directions.

    Two people are involved in the accident, the extent of their injuries is unclear. One person has been taken to hospital.

    At 9 o’clock, the emergency services were finished with their efforts.

  • Strike started in Israel – visible in several places

    Now the big strike planned by the umbrella organization Histradut has started in Israel. The reason for the strike is to put pressure on the government to reach an agreement with Hamas and bring home those who remain hostages.

    Signs of it are already visible in several parts of the country.

    Dozens of protesters have blocked a road in Tel Aviv. The same thing happens in other cities. In the northern town of Rosh Pina, a road is also blocked by protests, reports say Times of Israel.

    At Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv, a strike will last between 08:00 and 10:00 local time. However, this will not affect incoming flights.

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