Loud bang alarm – Latest news – fast news from Aftonbladet

THREE NEWS FROM THE DAY YOU CAN’T MISS

  • The police have received an alarm about a loud bang in Norrköping.

    The alarm came in at 00:18.

    – Several people have reported to SOS that they heard a loud bang. We are investigating the matter. So far we have not found anything that indicates an explosion, says the police officer on duty Torbjörn Lindqvist.

    The police have a patrol on site in Ektorp and are searching the area.

    – We are currently searching a property.

  • THREE NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS

  • 37 children drowned during festival in India

    At least 46 people, including 37 children, have drowned during a religious festival in eastern India in the past 24 hours.

    It reports BBC and refers to local authorities.

    The victims are said to have died while ritually bathing in flooded rivers and ponds.

    The Hindu festival of Jiviputrika lasts for three days and celebrates the well-being of children. The holiday also includes the mothers fasting for them.

    According to local officials, many have ignored the dangerously high water levels. It is feared that the death toll may rise.

  • Person hit by car – taken to hospital

    At around 9:30 p.m., the police, emergency services and ambulance were called to road 600 outside Uppsala where a person had been hit by a car.

    – A person must have appeared there in the dark, says the rescue service’s management operator Oscar Davila UNT.

    The person was taken to hospital by ambulance. The extent of the injury is currently unknown.

    The road had to be closed completely after the accident and was able to reopen at 11 p.m.

  • Dozens dead in Israeli attack in Gaza

    The Israeli military has repeatedly attacked areas of the Jabalia refugee camp in Gaza. Archive image. Photo: Hatem Moussa/AP/TT

    An Israeli airstrike on a school in Gaza has claimed at least eleven lives, according to several media companies and the Gaza Ministry of Health.

    The attack was carried out in the Jabalia refugee camp, according to the Ministry of Health, which is controlled by terror-labeled Hamas. Children were among the victims, according to the Ministry of Health.

    The school functioned as a facility for internally displaced persons, reports the British BBC.

    Israel confirmed an attack, which it said was carried out with precision, targeting a military command center used by Hamas.

    A person on the scene testifies that two robots hit the school grounds.

  • Raining at Dramaten – visitors had to leave

    During tonight’s performance of “King Lear” at the Dramaten in Stockholm, rainwater began to drip on some theatergoers.

    – It has leaked in so that some visitors have had to leave. There are eight, ten people who sat on the left side of the parquet, says Lena Törner, press officer at Dramaten.

    The water must have started to leak at the end of the first act. The performance will now be finished playing.

    – We are investigating what it is and I hope it is nothing major.

    The visitors who left the performance will be compensated.

  • Norwegian wanted internationally – connected to the pagers

    A Norwegian whose company is linked to the exploding pagers in Lebanon has been wanted internationally by the Norwegian police.

    It reportr NRK.

    There is no request to arrest the man, but the wanted notice is sent out for him to be wanted internationally.

    The man was reported missing on Wednesday. According to his employer, he was to attend a conference in Boston, writes VG.

    It is confirmed that the man arrived in the United States. But he did not appear at the conference on Tuesday, and was not on board the flight home for which he had a ticket.

  • UN refugee agency: Difficult to support Ukraine this winter

    UNHCR’s representative in Ukraine, Karolina Lindholm Billing, at a previous press conference via video link. Archive image. Photo: Claudio Bresciani/TT

    The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) says that operations in Ukraine are underfunded and that it may be difficult to help the vulnerable during the winter.

    UNHCR’s representative in Ukraine, Swedish Karolina Lindholm Billing, says that support may be necessary for vulnerable areas in Ukraine, as Russian invasion forces direct attacks against infrastructural targets such as power plants, energy networks and electricity supply. This affects the population at large, but internally displaced persons are particularly vulnerable.

    – The reality is that the financial support for organizations like ours is far too low this late in the (fiscal) year, says Lindholm Billing, adding that the business is only covered financially to 47 percent.

    Around 3.6 million internally displaced people are estimated to be in Ukraine. Further refugees are expected to find their way to the west of the country due to the Russian offensive in Donetsk, among others. Since August 1, nearly 99,000 people have fled villages at the front, according to Lindholm Billing.

  • Kristersson: New nuclear power before the next election

    Ulf Kristersson. Photo: Lotte Fernvall

    Construction of new nuclear power reactors must begin in Sweden before the election in 2026. Or at least there is a hammered out plan.

    This is what Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson (M) says in an interview with DN.

    – The decisions required to build new nuclear power must be in place. Then it can be combined with a physical spade, says Kristersson to the newspaper.

    One of the government’s most important goals during the term is to build new nuclear power in Sweden.

    The government wants new nuclear power with an output equivalent to at least two large-scale reactors to be in place by 2035 at the latest.

  • Cyclist hit – seriously injured

    A cyclist was hit by a car in Kärrtorp in southern Stockholm at around 2.30pm on Thursday.

    The person was taken by ambulance to hospital and is seriously injured, the police say.

    The police have started an investigation regarding negligence in traffic, grossly causing bodily harm or alternatively causing bodily harm.

  • No German money for Northvolt

    The battery company Northvolt cannot expect any German support. Archive image. Photo: Pontus Lundahl/TT

    The German government will not give any new money to the struggling battery company Northvolt, which is building a factory in Heide in central Germany, reports Dagens Nyheter.

    The German government has already contributed the equivalent of ten billion kroner to the plant in Heide.

    “Since Northvolt is a Swedish company and the current problems are related to scaling up the Swedish facility, the issue of German support, in addition to the funding Northvolt has already promised for the project in Heide, is not relevant,” writes a spokesperson for German business and the Climate Ministry in an email to DN.

    The Swedish government has stated that it is not appropriate to invest money in Northvolt.

  • Man dead in custody

    A 45-year-old man deprived of his liberty has been found dead in custody at the Lund police station.

    He was found dead in the morning. At the moment, the police do not suspect a crime, but the cell has been cordoned off and investigated.

    According to routine, the police have filed a report of misconduct, which will be investigated by the Special Prosecutor’s Chamber.

    The man’s next of kin have been notified.

  • Man beaten after traffic accident

    The police have been alerted to an assault on the E20 near Lidköping.

    A 45-year-old man was first pushed by another motorist who swerved.

    The other motorist then got out and assaulted the man.

    The person then fled the scene.

    The police are there now to investigate the incident.

  • Boy hit by truck

    A 10-year-old boy has been hit by a truck on a road outside Norrtälje.

    The police were alerted to the incident at 5 p.m.

    – The child has been taken to hospital by ambulance helicopter, says police spokesperson Nadya Norton.

    The extent of the damage is unclear.

    – At the moment, we have not established any criminal classification.

    How did the accident happen?

    – I currently have no information about that, says Nadya Norton.

    At 8:30 p.m., the police state that the boy was not injured in the accident.

    – The boy has been examined in hospital and is unharmed, says Nadya Norton.

  • Fire in apartment – man to hospital

    A fire has broken out in an apartment on Norrmalm in Borås.

    The alarm came in at 5:10 p.m.

    A 75-year-old man was retrieved from the apartment by the rescue service’s smoke divers and taken to hospital by ambulance.

    – The person was unconscious at the time of departure, says Hans-Jörgen Ostler, police spokesperson.

    Just before 6 p.m., the fire is out.

    There is currently no criminal classification.

    Initially, the police stated that it was a woman who was taken to hospital. Later, the information was changed to say that it was about a man.

  • SAS cancels more departures

    Photo: Johan Nilsson/TT / TT News Agency

    SAS cancels almost all departures between Visby and the mainland, reports P4 Gotland.

    The canceled departures apply to November and December.

    Already on Wednesday, the airline announced that air traffic between Sundsvall, Ronneby and Stockholm will be stopped during the last two months of the year.

    Departures from Ängelholm to Stockholm have also been affected.

    – We don’t do this with a good heart or because we think it’s fun, said press manager Alexandra Lindgren Kaoukji to Aftonbladet at the time.

    Read more here.

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