Fire at Skansen – storage destroyed

NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS

  • Fire at Skansen – storage destroyed

    On Tuesday morning, the police received an alarm that a warehouse was on fire at Skansen in Stockholm, reports In the middle of.

    – There have been various forms of work there in the past and it seems to be an electrical fault that is behind the fire, says police spokesperson Daniel Wikdahl to the newspaper.

    The flames did not spread to any other building or object, but the storage building burned down.

    It was a storehouse of gardening supplies.

  • THREE NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS

  • The petrol price is reduced – below SEK 17

    The price of petrol and diesel, among other things, is reduced. Archive image. Photo: Fredrik Sandberg/TT

    Mackarna lowers its fuel prices. The target price for 95-octane petrol at manned stations is reduced by 35 öre and ends up at SEK 16.99 per litre.

    The diesel price is also being reduced, down by 25 öre to SEK 17.14 per litre. The price of biodiesel (HVO100) is also reduced by 25 öre to SEK 19.79 per litre.

    The price of vehicle gas is left unchanged, while the price of ethanol (E85) is reduced by 15 öre to SEK 13.64 per litre.

  • Swedish economy is losing momentum

    Swedish economy is losing momentum. GDP (gross domestic product) decreased by 0.4 percent in September compared to August, according to Statistics Norway (SCB).

    For the third quarter as a whole, GDP decreased by 0.1 percent compared to last year.

    “Sweden’s gross domestic product fell in September, which together with a negative development in July contributed to growth during the third quarter as a whole falling somewhat compared to the previous quarter,” says Melker Pettersson Loberg, national economist at Statistics Sweden, in a press release.

  • At least 55 dead in Israeli attack

    At least 55 people have been killed in an Israeli attack on the town of Beit Lahia in northern Gaza, reports Norwegian TV2 citing the Palestinian news agency Wafa.

    Several children and women are said to be injured and about a dozen are said to be missing.

  • Moped car ran off the road – two to hospital

    A moped has driven off the road in Enköping. A young boy and girl sat in it, the police write.

    Both travel to hospital by ambulance. Their injury status is unclear.

    The police alcohol test the driver, a 16-year-old boy, who blows positive.

    He is suspected of aggravated drunk driving, drugged driving and minor drug offences.

    The car was discovered by a passerby who alerted the police around midnight.

  • Serious assault in Malmö – no one arrested

    A man has been severely beaten by two men in Malmö, the police write.

    He was beaten with a stick by the two men, who then left the scene.

    No one has been arrested, but the abused man states that one of the suspected perpetrators is known to him from before.

  • Several dead in attack on Kharkiv

    At least four people have been killed in a Russian attack on a residential area in Ukraine’s second-largest city Kharkiv on Tuesday night, according to Mayor Ihor Terechov.

    Two residential buildings have been destroyed and around 20 people injured in the attack.

    Kharkiv, located about three miles from the Russian border, has been subjected to repeated and extensive airstrikes during the full-scale Russian offensive.

  • South Korean President: Countermeasures required

    South Korean President Yoon Suk-Yeol warns that the North Korean soldiers sent to Russia pose a global threat and that the rest of the world must now prepare countermeasures.

    – This illegal military cooperation between Russia and North Korea is a significant security threat to the international community and could pose a serious risk to our national security, says the president.

    North Korea has sent about 10,000 troops to Russia to fight against Ukraine in the coming weeks, the US Defense Department said on Monday.

  • Five men are sentenced for stone-throwing at Paludan meeting

    Counter-protesters throw stones at a police bus Rasmus Paludan’s gathering at Skånegården in Malmö in April 2022. Photo: Johan Nilsson/TT

    Five men are sentenced for throwing stones at the police in April 2022, reports SVT Skåne.

    It was when the far-right Danish-Swedish politician Rasmus Paludan held a meeting where he was going to burn a Koran at Skånegården outside Malmö, that the five men attacked the police. Among other things, they threw stones and gravel and forced a riot fence.

    The sabotage went on and off during the three-hour gathering. The men are now sentenced to between two months and one year in prison.

    Paludan himself is charged with incitement against a group of people in connection with the incident. The verdict is expected within a week.

  • Egypt now free of malaria

    Egypt is now free of malaria. This is announced by the World Health Organization (WHO), which describes the fight to eradicate the disease in the country as “a century-long effort” and an end to a disease that has existed since “time immemorial”.

    WHO assesses a country as malaria-free if it demonstrates that domestic cases of the disease have been stopped for three consecutive years.

    In 2022, malaria caused more than 600,000 deaths worldwide, 95 percent of them in Africa, according to the WHO.

  • Trump: I’m the opposite of a Nazi

    Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump in Atlanta. Photo: Mike Stewart/AP/TT

    Presidential candidate Donald Trump is hitting back at comments from his opponents who draw parallels between his policies and leadership style with Nazism.

    – I am not a Nazi. I am the opposite of a Nazi, Trump said at a rally in Georgia.

    – The way they talk is so disgusting and just horrible, he continued.

    Trump also criticized rival Kamala Harris for calling him a fascist last week.

    – She’s a fascist, okay? She is a fascist.

    Trump’s comments come a day after his campaign rally at Madison Square Garden in New York, which was highlighted by Trump’s opponents as an example of divisive and racist rhetoric.

    Several, including former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, took the meeting even further and compared it to a Nazi rally in 1939 at the same location.

  • Review: 100 died due to lack of space

    The newspaper Sjukhusläkaren’s review of lex Maria cases from last year shows that lack of space contributed to the death of 100 people in hospital, writes Elin Karlsson, Sjukhusläkarna, in DN Debatt.

    “There are 100 individuals who had their lives cut short because they did not receive care at the right level of care, by staff with the right skills. These are unnecessary deaths that could have been avoided with adequately dimensioned care,” she writes, pointing to a large number of unreported deaths.

    Karlsson, together with other hospital doctors, demands a zero vision of deaths due to lack of care places and a cross-block national healthcare agreement.

  • Ship with dangerous Russian cargo in port

    The cargo ship MV Ruby leaves the port in Tromsö. Photo: Stian Saur/Nordlys/TT

    The damaged ship MV Ruby, with 20,000 tons of ammonium nitrate on board, is in port in Norfolk in eastern England, reports Sky News.

    The ship was allowed to dock due to bad weather in the North Sea. The potentially explosive cargo must be moved to another vessel.

    The Malta-flagged vessel was loaded in a Russian port on the Kola Peninsula and suffered hull damage in connection with it. The ship was turned away from Norway and has been denied docking in Lithuania and Malta.

  • Both Biden and Trump may have been tracked via app

    Donald Trump and Joe Biden have been tracked thanks to their bodyguards using the exercise app Strava.

    It writes Omni and refers to the French newspaper Le Monde.

    In the app, cyclists and runners can save and compare their training laps.

    Therefore, it can also conversely act as a kind of tracker.

    Le Monde has been able to identify users of the app both within Joe Biden’s and Donald Trump’s bodyguard protection. The same applies to Vladimir Putin and French President Emmanuel Macron, writes Omni.

  • Your Instagram posts are worse than the celebrities

    Instagram CEO Adam Mosseri. Archive image. Photo: Jose Luis Magana/AP/TT

    Have you ever wondered why your Instagram videos look like mashed potatoes compared to the flashy clips of celebrities? Quality-wise, it’s not your fault. According to Instagram CEO Adam Mosseri, the best quality is simply saved for the most popular content. During a recent question and answer session, Mosseri explains that posts that initially get good distribution but then drop off get poorer video quality.

    According to Mosseri, it’s not about a big difference in quality, but more popular posts – usually from already known accounts and people – are simply a little better, purely in terms of video and image technology.

    Instagram, and the owner Meta, believe that by extension it is impossible that all content that is uploaded does so in the best quality. According to the platform, things that get increased distribution become “better” afterwards.

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