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Half of the lots near or below the barrier

today at 03.17 Hans Österman

Half of the Riksdag’s parties are close to or below the four percent barrier. This is shown by Kantar Sifo’s monthly summation of several opinion polls, reports Echo.

In total, S+V+MP+C collects 53.5 percent and M+KD+L+SD gets 45.1 percent.

This is how the compilation looks, batch by batch:

Answer: 37.2

W: 7.8

MP: 4.2

C: 4.3

M: 19.5

L: 3.5

KD: 4

SD: 18.1

Other: 1.4

Latest news

  • Woman was beaten – man stabbed

    A man and a woman, both aged 25, are suspected of serious assault after a fight in an apartment in Borås on Wednesday evening.

    The police were alerted at 11:13 p.m. and state that the arrested had a relationship.

    – The man is suspected of having punched the woman in the face and the woman is suspected of having stabbed the man, says Morten Gunneng, police officer on duty.

    Neither the woman nor the man are said to have life-threatening injuries.

    In the apartment there were children who were taken care of by social services, according to the police.

  • North Korea fired missile – alarm in Japan

    North Korea fired a ballistic missile overnight on Tuesday that landed in the Sea of ​​Japan.

    Residents of the Japanese island of Hokkaido were urged via their mobile phones to seek shelter.

    “Evacuate immediately, evacuate immediately,” the message read.

    Later, the warning was withdrawn in a new message, writes NHK.

    The missile was the first fired by North Korea since March 27. It landed in the waters outside Japan’s economic zone, states Kyodo News.

  • Pirate drama in bay – tanker boarded

    A Singapore-flagged tanker, with 20 people on board, has been boarded by “unidentified persons”, it said Al Jazeera.

    The ship was in the Gulf of Guinea off the Ivory Coast when it was hijacked.

    A patrol boat sent out to rescue the crew was unable to locate the vessel as the transponder was switched off.

    – We think they are pirates because the approach is the same. We are looking for external help from Spain and Europe, an anonymous source told Reuters.

  • Sri Lanka’s plan: Sell 100,000 monkeys

    Sri Lanka has advanced plans to export 100,000 monkeys to China. Ölandet has major financial problems and needs to get money in, and quickly, writes TT.

    Therefore, Agriculture Minister Mahinda Amaraweera wants to export Ceylon macaques, a species endemic to Sri Lanka and classified as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

    – They want the monkeys for the over one thousand zoos they have in their country, he says.

    According to official figures, there are between two and three million Ceylon macaques on the island, but no one knows how well that number corresponds to reality.

    Many Sri Lankans see Ceylon macaques as pests that destroy crops and enter homes in search of food. But animal rights groups are critical of the deal.

    – We want to know why they want so many monkeys, whether it is for food, for medical experiments or something else, says Jagath Gunawardana at an organization in Colombo.

    There is no information on how much China is willing to pay for the monkeys.

  • Large fire in a truck – chaos on the E6

    A truck is on fire on the E6 near Skottorp in Halland.

    The incident has “a very large impact on traffic”, according to the Swedish Transport Administration.

    The rescue service is on the scene, but states that the truck will burn out, says Peter Stened, internal commander of the rescue service to Hallandsposten.

    – We have a forecast of a couple of hours for the fire itself, but I don’t know when the road can be opened again. Diesel oil has spilled onto the road and it’s a really bad mix with plastic that creates a lot of heat that damages the asphalt.

    The Swedish Transport Administration estimates that the problems may continue until 00:45.

  • Robber with knife chased customer in grocery store

    At the same time as an assault alarm is triggered in a grocery store in Nynäshamn at 8:30 p.m., people call the police about assault and threats with a knife in the same store.

    Several police patrols are called to the scene.

    Once on the scene, the police were able to establish that the whole thing started as an attempted robbery against the store but turned into two perpetrators chasing a customer at knifepoint and beating the customer.

    When the police arrived at the scene, private individuals and guards in the store had caught and disarmed the two perpetrators.

    The police took over the arrest.

    The men are now suspected of attempted robbery, aggravated unlawful threats, attempted aggravated assault, assault, aggravated violation of the Knife Act, violation of the Weapons Act (tear gas), threat to an official and drug offense personal use.

    According to the police, both people are in their early teens.

  • Putin approved the journalist’s arrest

    Evan Gershkovich is taken out of court in Moscow on March 30. Photo: Alexander Zemlianichenko/AP

    Vladimir Putin personally approved the arrest of Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, sources say Bloomberg.

    Gershkovich was arrested on March 29 and is now formally charged with espionage. Something that the US protested loudly against.

    According to Bloomberg’s sources, the Kremlin’s hard line suggests it is seeking a confrontation with Washington.

  • Trump is suing Michael Cohen for $500 million

    Being sued by his former client. Photo: Yuki Iwamura/AP

    Former President Donald Trump is suing his former lawyer Michael Cohen for more than $500 million, reports say Fox News.

    According to a source for the news site, the lawsuit should have nothing to do with the indictment against Trump.

    Instead, it should be about Cohen breaking his professional code by having spread false claims about Trump, with “malicious intentions”.

    He also allegedly violated the confidentiality of his employment agreement with Trump.

    According to the lawsuit, these statements must have been made during numerous press conferences, in a podcast series in which Cohen participated and in two books that he wrote.

    Trump’s legal team filed the more than 30-page lawsuit in a Florida court today.

  • The electricity support is delayed: “Talking for months”

    Energy and Industry Minister Ebba Busch (KD) Photo: Caisa Rasmussen/TT

    Five million households have to wait even longer for the electricity subsidy.

    This is what Energy and Food Minister Ebba Busch (KD) tells TT.

    Busch does not want to go into what is causing the delay.

    – The forecast looks good because in a few weeks we should be able to come back with a little more precision in time, I dare not say a date. But a span of time anyway, says Busch and continues:

    – We are talking months, not six months, I dare say that much.

    Read more here.

  • 17,000 life-threatening lampposts in New Zealand

    It started with a lamp from a street lamp falling across a footpath in Wellington.

    Now 17,000 life-threatening street lamps have been discovered around New Zealand.

    “Every single street lamp in New Zealand’s capital is at risk of collapsing without warning onto the footpaths,” writes The Guardian.

    The bulbs in the streetlights weigh like a full-grown turkey, a car tire or two bowling balls and risk causing major damage, according to council spokesman Richard MacLean.

    – I think it is safe to say that you would either be seriously injured or killed, he tells The Guardian.

    According to the municipality, the adapter that attaches the LED lights should not be adapted to Wellington’s strong winds.

  • Suspected attempted murder – man beaten by several people

    Shortly after 3 p.m., the police received an alarm about a suspected assault in Nyköping.

    Several perpetrators allegedly assaulted a man with at least one affection.

    The injured man is aged 25. He was taken to hospital but was awake and talking.

    The police have carried out door knocking in the area and a forensic investigation is to be carried out

    The incident is classified as attempted murder or aggravated assault. At least one person has been arrested in the case, the police write on their website.

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    Latest news

  • Do diplomats also need visas?

    Johan

    In the case of the US, it seems that even diplomats need visas. There are special visas that can be issued to them.

  • Why 5 arrested in Eskilstuna

    Carol

  • Nothing about a malfunction on the ikan obsnk?

    G. Johansson

    Hello! It’s nothing major that we’ve seen anyway, but according to Downdetector some people seem to be experiencing glitches with Ikano Bank right now.

  • Advertisement for seat cushion, on Aftonbladet directly today?

    Can’t find the ad again

    Anders Tegelberg

    Hello! Unfortunately, I don’t know which ad you are referring to. Hope you still find what you’re looking for!

  • Why can’t I find anything about the demonstration of Sweden’s firefighters that is going on

    Christopher

    We had a reporter on site and covered the demonstration! Presumably we will publish TV clips from there or an article soon.

  • Show more posts

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