Fire in multi-family house – smoke diving in progress

NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS

  • Fire in multi-family house – smoke diving in progress

    There is a fire in an apartment building in central Linköping.

    Emergency services, ambulance and police moved out at 20.20.

    According to the emergency services, there is a fire on the third floor. The fire may have spread to two apartments.

    A total of 15 people from two fire stations are working on the scene, and smoke divers have been deployed on two floors.

    “No person should be injured. Evacuation of the property is underway,” the police write on their website.

  • THREE NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS

  • Commuter train evacuated – hit concrete objects

    A commuter train has been evacuated in Knivsta north of Stockholm.

    This after the train ran into a concrete object on the track.

    The accident happened between 5 and 5:30 p.m., and it was only at 6:15 p.m. that the decision was made that the passengers needed to evacuate the train.

    – It is classified as sabotage, says Karolina Wichman at SL’s press service.

    The police are on their way out to investigate where the possible crime may have been committed.

    The accident caused damage to the train, and work is now being done to remove it from the track.

    Train traffic is now running again, but the accident has led to major consequential delays for other trains on the route between Knivsta and Uppsala.

    – I recommend all travelers to find out what the situation looks like on the Swedish Transport Agency’s website.

  • Problems with Handelsbanken solved

    Photo: Screenshot of the merchant bank’s app

    Several customers experienced problems with Handelsbanken.

    Couldn’t log into the app or go to their website.

    On Downdetector’s website, there were over 1,000 people who reported problems at 7 p.m.

    Barely half an hour later, the services now function as usual.

    “We regret the problems it may have caused our customers,” writes John Zanchi, press officer at Handelsbanken, in an email to Aftonbladet.

  • E-commerce: Eight out of ten toys dangerous for children

    Toys do not meet the requirements. Archive image. Photo: Pontus Lundahl/TT

    Eight out of ten toys that can be bought on online sales platforms do not meet EU safety requirements.

    This means that children risk suffocation or poisoning from the products.

    The Swedish Toy and Baby Industry, together with the European industry organization Toy Industries of Europe (TIE), has examined around a hundred different toys without a brand name or with an unknown one.

    These include teething rings that easily break into small pieces with a risk of suffocation as a result.

    The toys were purchased from Allegro, AliExpress, Amazon Marketplace, Bol, Cdiscount, Fruugo, Light In The Box, Shein, Temu and Wish.

  • New Israeli attack – several killed

    Nine people, including women and children, have been killed in an Israeli attack on a residential building in the Maghazi refugee camp in central Gaza, writes Al Jazeera with reference to the Palestinian news agency Wafa.

    According to Wafa, the attack was aimed at a populated area of ​​the camp.

  • Large kitchen coat of 18

    Several vehicles are involved in a kitchen sink at the Fredhäll tunnel on the E4 in Stockholm.

    – Right now the last blue light is running and the road is open again, says Ola Österling, press spokesperson at the police.

    However, an additional kitchen sink has occurred on E18 at the height of Kungsängen.

    The alarm came in at 4:31 p.m.

    The police are on the scene and an ambulance has been called.

    – No one is seriously injured, but beyond that I don’t know what the damage picture looks like.

    One of three lanes is open in the northbound direction.

    – There is massive queuing.

  • Sweden sues Iran for downed plane

    Memorial for those killed in the plane crash in Iran in January 2020. Photo: Pontus Lundahl/TT

    Sweden, together with several other countries, has filed a lawsuit against Iran for the shooting down of the Ukrainian civilian aircraft in 2020, where 176 people died, of which 17 were natives of Sweden.

    – Yesterday, Sweden, Ukraine, Canada and Great Britain submitted a submission to the International Court of Justice in The Hague in a case we brought against Iran, says Foreign Minister Maria Malmer Stenergard (M) during question time in the Riksdag.

    – We demand that Iran’s responsibility under international law for the shooting be established and that the relatives of the victims receive compensation.

    Plane PS752 was accidentally shot down by Iranian air defenses on January 8, 2020, shortly after it took off from Tehran.

  • Death of Yahya Sinwar

    Hamas’s top leader Yahya Sinwar is dead, an Israeli official told the public service company Kan.

    Learn more here.

  • Mbappé is not making a statement at the moment, the lawyer announces

    Kylian Mbappé announces via his lawyer that he will not give any explanations regarding the rape accusations until the Swedish legal system asks for them.

    – He reserves the right to give his explanations only when Sweden’s legal system needs them, says Me Marie-Alix Canu-Bernard, Kylian Mbappé’s lawyer to AFP.

    At the same time, she strongly condemns “the media’s claim which suggests that Kylian Mbappé would have previously spoken about the course of events during his trip to Stockholm”.

  • IDF: Hamas stop may be dead

    The IDF is investigating whether it has killed top Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, according to Reuters.

    It is not yet confirmed.

    Read more here.

  • Liam Payne’s family breaks their silence

    The family of former One Direction member Liam Payne has issued a statement following the death notice, reports Sky News.

    “Liam will always be in our hearts and we will remember him for his kind, funny and brave soul,” they state.

    Liam Payne died on Wednesday after falling from a balcony during a visit to Argentina.

    Read more here.

  • Norwegian Embassy premises in Beirut

    Norway’s embassy in Beirut has evacuated after bomb threat, writes NRK.

    – We can confirm that the building where, among other things, the Norwegian embassy in Beirut is located, received a bomb threat today. There are a small number of Norwegian diplomats who are now in Beirut, and everyone at the embassy is safe, communications advisor Ragnhild Simenstad writes to NRK.

    Al Jazeera’s office is in the same building. They have also evacuated, according to Reuters.

  • Several children poisoned – one man arrested

    Nine people, including several children, have been poisoned by cookies in Karlskrona, BLT reports. A man has been arrested.

    The police have cordoned off an apartment and secured remains from the cookies, several people have been taken to hospital.

    – Those who ate the cookies were affected by vomiting, dizziness and hallucinations and when medical staff came to the residence, several of them were quite ill there, says prosecutor Lena-Marie Bergström to SVT.

  • Maja’s suspected killer suffers from a serious mental disorder

    The 18-year-old who is suspected of 17-year-old Maja’s death suffers from a serious mental disorder, writes Borås newspaper.

    It appears after the larger psychiatric investigation is complete.

    – The investigation supports the fact that it is forensic psychiatric care that should be chosen as a punishment, says prosecutor Nina Friman Björka to the newspaper.

    Read more about the Maja case here.

  • Man dead in Kumla after fire

    A man has died after a fire in an apartment in Kumla on Thursday, according to the police.

    Relatives have been notified.

    The police were called to the address on Thursday morning. The place has later been cordoned off.

    The police are investigating arson.

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