NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS
An Unrwa worker in the devastation after an Israeli attack on a school run by the UN organization in Nuseirat, Gaza in May. Photo: Abdel Kareem Hana/AP/TT
Israel is expected to approve two controversial laws that effectively ban UNRWA from operating in Israel.
This is reported by TT.
The laws are also expected to severely curtail the organization’s operations in Gaza and the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
Among other things, the text of the law states that Israeli authorities may no longer have contact with UNRWA, the UN aid organization for Palestine refugees.
The law has previously been met with sharp criticism from the UN and the EU. On Sunday, seven foreign ministers warned in a joint statement that a ban on UNRWA will have “catastrophic consequences for an already critical and rapidly deteriorating humanitarian situation”.
Sweden has also expressed concern about the law.
The US also urges Israel not to adopt the ban.
THREE NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS
Sweden will support Ukraine with an additional SEK 490 million.
This was announced by Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson at a press conference in Reykjavik together with Nordic prime ministers and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyj.
The money will go to Ukraine’s defense forces and can be used, among other things, for fighter robots within the framework of Ukraine’s F16 program, training and mine clearance.
The Swedish government also decided on Thursday to give SEK 230 million to a Danish initiative that supports the procurement of defense equipment produced in Ukraine, writes TT.
Sweden’s government has decided to stop all direct government cooperation with Georgia.
Aid Minister Benjamin Dousa says so DN.
– This is, among other things, about cooperation between the tax authorities, which we judge is not appropriate under the current circumstances, says the minister of aid to the newspaper.
One person has been taken to hospital after an accident at the goods railway station in Malmö, the police write on their website.
The person is said to have been hit by a goods wagon and is seriously injured, according to Region Skåne.
A workplace accident report will be drawn up.
A couple in their 80s who went out to pick mushrooms outside Boxholm are missing, the police write on their website.
The couple’s car has been in the same spot since Friday.
The police were alerted on Monday when a relative became worried. During the afternoon, a search effort was launched in the area with several dog patrols and drones.
– The search operation is ongoing. We have and have had several dog patrols out, says Mats Pettersson, press spokesperson for the police in the East region.
No crime is currently suspected.
Protesters in Tbilisi. Photo: Zurab Tsertsvadze
The opposition demonstrated on Monday evening against the election results in Georgia, where the right-wing populist ruling party was declared the winner.
When EU President Viktor Orban arrived in Tbilisi on Monday to congratulate the winning Georgian Dream party, he was greeted by opposition whistleblowers.
The opposition, which is more pro-EU than the government, has not accepted the election results and demands that the elections be redone.
Up to 15,000 Georgians participate in the demonstration, reports Meduza.
The District Attorney of Pennsylvania is suing Elon Musk to stop his $1 million raffle to voters in the state.
Dert reports CNBC.
Musk has said he will raffle $1 million a day to registered voters in swing states who sign his petition “in support of free speech and the right to bear arms.”
Critics believe that it is a way for Trump supporter Musk to solicit votes in favor of the ex-president.
in the US it is illegal to pay people to register to vote, and it is believed that Elon Musk’s stunt is getting around it.
The district attorney calls it “an unquestionably illegal lottery” and a threat to the integrity of the presidential election.
The President of Ukraine arrived on Monday in Iceland, where the Nordic Council is currently meeting.
He will meet the Prime Ministers of Iceland, Denmark, Norway, Finland and Sweden.
It reports Kyiv Independent newspaper.
Both Mälartåg’s and SJ’s traffic is affected on Dalabanan. Archive image. Photo: Caisa Rasmussen/TT
Train traffic on the Dalabanan between Borlänge and Uppsala, Arlanda and Stockholm has been affected by canceled trains and delayed departures on Monday afternoon. The reason is that a tree fell over a contact line between Sala and Avesta Krylbo.
The Swedish Transport Administration received the alarm about an electrical fault at 2:30 p.m. There is still no forecast for when traffic past Sala can be up and running again. Some routes are replaced by bus.
– Our repairmen are on site and trying to see if there is a quick way to fix this contact line, says Daniel Mossberg, press communicator at the Swedish Transport Administration.
No train was nearby when the tree fell over the power line, according to the Swedish Transport Administration.
Police and an ambulance have been sent to Konduktörsvägen in Kristianstad after an alarm about an injured man.
The man, who is 18 years old, must have stab or cut injuries, according to the police.
– It is in a residential area and we are there blocking off the suspected crime scene right now, says Evelina Olsson, press spokesperson at the police in Skåne.
The injured man was found outside.
– He had to go to the hospital by ambulance. He was awake and talkative, says Evelina Olsson.
Children in Lillhamra in Västerås have received sweets with wire and screws when they have gone trick or treating in the area.
This is what the police write on their website.
The parents contacted the police, and a report has been made about causing danger to others-
There is no suspect.
The article is updated here
Ballot boxes have started burning in two different places in the United States during Monday morning.
The first alarm came from Portland, Oregon. There, an incendiary bomb had been placed in a ballot box, according to the local police. However, it is unclear whether ballot papers were damaged.
Then came a similar alarm from the city of Vancouver in the state of Washington. Hundreds of votes are said to have been damaged.
The local channel Cat describes how the emergency services pulled smoldering ballots out of the ballot box.
Another man has been arrested on suspicion of cake poisoning in Karlskrona, reports SVT Blekinge.
The man, who is said to be 25 years old, is on probable grounds suspected of serious assault.
A man in his 20s has previously been detained on the same suspicions.
It was on October 16 that nine people became ill after eating cookies in an apartment in Karlskrona. Prosecutor Lena-Marie Bergström has previously stated that there was hashish in the cookies.
Five men have been sentenced to between two months and a year in prison for sabotaging the police at a Koran burning in April 2022, reports SVT.
The men had thrown stones and gravel at the police and breached their riot fence when Rasmus Paludan was about to burn a Koran at Skånegården.
The policemen described it in questioning as the worst thing they had been through.
Rasmus Paludan is in turn charged with incitement against a group of people in connection with the incident.
Fazer is recalling Moomin lollipops because a “product safety risk” has arisen, the company writes in a press release.
“The size, hardness and shape of the candy combined with the stick that softens in the mouth can pose a safety risk if the candy suddenly detaches from the stick,” the company writes.
The security risk arose after several complaints from consumers.
Show more posts
Tip us
expand-left
full screen Photo: Emma-Sofia Olsson / Schibsted
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 should 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