THREE NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS:
Drones have been seen at Arlanda again, according to information to Aftonbladet.
It is the third day in a row that there have been alarms about drones at Arlanda.
THREE NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS
Four climbers, two from Italy and two from South Korea, have been found dead near the summit of Mont Blanc in France.
It reports AP.
The climbers went missing on Saturday, and due to bad weather they could not get help either from the ground or by helicopter.
They were found on Tuesday at an altitude of 4,700 meters. According to French authorities, they died of severe hypothermia.
People look at the flooded Red River next to the Long Bien Bridge in Hanoi after Typhoon Yagi. Photo: Huy Han/AP/TT
The death toll from Typhoon Yagi’s rampage in Vietnam continues to rise.
Close to 130 people have died in the storm, state media reports on Tuesday. Another 70 people are missing and several hundred are injured.
Meanwhile, the Red River, which flows through the capital Hanoi, continues to rise. Residents in the area have been forced to evacuate while rescue efforts continue.
In several rivers in the northern parts of the country, the water level is dangerously high, the authorities warn. In Phu Tho province, a bridge over the flooded Red River collapsed. About ten cars and trucks and two motorcycles are said to have fallen into the river, with many missing as a result.
Searching for missing after the Israeli attack on Tuesday night. Photo: Sahir Alghorra/Zuma Press/TT
Palestinian authorities write down the death toll heavily after the overnight attack on a tent camp in Hamas-controlled Gaza. At least 19 people were killed, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.
Initially, 40 casualties were reported in the attack, which according to Israel was directed at a Hamas target.
The testimonies are strongly divided after a bloody Israeli air attack on a tent camp in the Gaza Strip. Israel names individual profiled terrorists who are said to have been killed, while Palestinians speak of a large number of innocent victims.
According to a statement from the Hamas government, the different numbers are because the health ministry only counts bodies that have been taken to hospitals, while the civil defense also counts bodies that have yet to be retrieved.
Stock image of ecstasy tablets. Photo: Bullitt Marquez/AP/TT
One million ecstasy tablets worth more than 25 million euros – the equivalent of more than 285 million kroner – have been seized by Spanish customs in the country’s largest seizure of synthetic pills ever.
Nine people have been arrested in the southern city of Malaga and on the holiday island of Ibiza. They are suspected of belonging to one of the largest criminal networks involved in the drug market in Spain and in several parts of Europe, the police write in a statement.
In addition to ecstasy, customs also found 73 kilograms of the drug MDMA, 212 kilograms of ketamine, 20 kilograms of cocaine and ten kilograms of hashish.
Swedbank’s former CEO Birgitte Bonnesen reacts strongly to the prison sentence against her.
This is reported by SR Ekot.
“Should I go to jail” the former CEO is said to have said, says her lawyer Per E Samuelson.
Bonnesen was sentenced for serious fraud to one year and three months in prison.
The Svea Court of Appeal announced this today.
The verdict will be appealed, according to Ekot.
A 15-year-old boy is suspected of having threatened at least one of the staff at a school in Mölndal.
According to the police, the boy must have had an air pistol “with a possible bang effect”.
The boy was found in a residence shortly after the incident, and is now arrested for aggravated unlawful threats.
No one was injured in the incident.
Photo: Alberto Pezzali / AP
After a period of speculation, US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken now claims that Iran has sent ballistic missiles to Russia, and that the weapons “will be used against Ukrainians within weeks”. That’s what The Guardian writes.
“The development and increased cooperation between Russia and Iran threatens European security and shows how Iran’s destabilizing influence extends far beyond the Middle East,” he says.
The US will now impose increased sanctions on Iran.
Following the statement, France, Germany and Britain jointly condemned Iran’s actions and said they would take immediate action to terminate aviation agreements with Iran and impose sanctions on Iran Air.
The man had been internationally wanted for three years when he was arrested at Arlanda on Saturday.
Now the man, who is in his 30s and has been singled out by the police as one of the leaders of the so-called Backan network in Gothenburg, has been arrested on suspicion of serious drug offences, reports P4 Gothenburg.
He denies any wrongdoing.
The police in Västerås moved out after an alarm that a man with a cloak and a bow had been seen in town.
The man was not found at first, but the police later received a tip that he was supposed to be on a bus. They then continued the hunt and soon found the man. He was then suspected of violating the Weapons Act, gross violation of the Knife Act and minor use of narcotics. The man was taken by the police for sampling.
During the police’s work, they became aware that there is a robbery going on in Västerås.
The police have been alerted by several callers that there is a bed in the middle of the road on the E6 outside Kungsbacka.
– It must include a mattress and legs on the road. I assume it’s bed legs, says police spokesperson August Brandt.
How the bed ended up there is still unknown. Traffic past the site is affected to some extent, according to the police.
At 2:30 p.m. there was an alarm that a sailboat had taken on water and capsized outside Kåseberga in southern Scania.
– It’s a caller who says they saw a sailboat capsize. We haven’t found anything, but the search is still on, says Mattias Cederblad at the rescue service Syd.
The rescue service is on site with two stations and is searching with drones. The sea rescue is on its way to the scene.
It is unclear how many people were in the boat.
The newspaper house in Marieberg, Stockholm, with the DN scraper. Archive image. Photo: Henrik Montgomery/TT
The Bonnier-owned staffing company Marieberg Media is closed down. The company hires out journalists to various newsrooms in the country, mainly in the Stockholm area. Among others, Expressen and Dagens Nyheter, also owned by Bonnier, have used Marieberg employees for many years.
In an email to the employees that TT has seen, it is stated that Marieberg’s customers need “new digital skills and perspectives” and that “Marieberg Media’s current competencies do not fully reflect the demands and expectations set by today’s increasingly digital media landscape.”
According to the industry newspaper Journalisten, a contributing reason for the closure is that since last spring Marieberg Media has started to comply with the law on employment protection. In short, media companies such as Expressen and DN can no longer handpick which temporary workers they want.
About 50 permanent employees are affected by the closure, according to The journalist.
Photo: Janerik Henriksson/TT
Former Swedbank CEO Birgitte Bonnesen is sentenced to one year and three months in prison for serious fraud, Svea Hovrätt announces.
The case concerns a series of public statements that Bonnesen made in 2018 and 2019, linked to the money laundering scandal that overshadowed the big bank at the time.
Read more here.
A Swedish teenager has been arrested, suspected of transporting 4.4 kilograms of explosives from Sweden to Denmark. Archive image. Photo: Johan Nilsson/TT
A 17-year-old Swedish boy is suspected of transporting 4.4 kilos of plastic explosives from Sweden to Denmark.
On Tuesday, the boy was detained for four weeks in Denmark, according to prosecutor Daniel Dokkedahl. The 17-year-old denies any crime.
Since before, two men, 19 and 20 years old, have been detained in the case. They are suspected of attempted murder because Danish police believe that the plan was to detonate a bomb in Odense in December.
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