One to hospital after fire

THREE NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS:

  • One to hospital after fire

    A man was taken to hospital by ambulance after an apartment fire in Uppsala during the night of Saturday.

    The emergency services were alerted at 03.15 and extinguished the fire, which caused heavy smoke through the windows.

    The man’s condition is unclear, but according to the emergency services, he was conscious when he was taken to hospital.

  • THREE NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS

  • A loud alarm woke Gävle

    The police and SOS Alarm were called during the night of Saturday by worried residents of Gävle. A loud noise perceived as an alarm continued for more than 40 minutes after 03:00.

    “It sounds like Hesa ​​Fredrik. More than enough for the people trying to sleep,” writes one reader.

    The police confirm that worried residents of Gävle have called and state that the noise was caused by a train.

    – It wasn’t Hesa ​​Fredrik and no air traffic alert. What we have been told is that it came from the train, but I have no information about the circumstances, says an officer at the police regional command center.

    The cause of the audio failure is unclear.

  • Jail for child abuse

    A 25-year-old man in Kronoberg county is sentenced to ten years in prison for 28 cases of sexual crimes against children, SVT reports.

    Among other things, he is convicted of seven counts of rape against children, one of which is considered serious. The 25-year-old is also sentenced for several cases of abuse, molestation and child pornography offences. The crimes were committed in the years 2021–2024.

    The convicted person remains in custody until the prison sentence is carried out.

  • The noise should keep the moose away

    Moose and other game that cross train tracks can cause accidents. In Trollhättan, a research project is underway where three new types of “crossing points” are tested for wild animals. The researchers have tested human voices, kid noises and guitar solos to scare the animals away from the rails, reports TTELA.

    What has worked best are human voices and kid noises.

    Camera recordings show how the animals leave the rails when the warning is activated a few times a week.

  • Two cars collided – one drove into a bus shelter

    On Malmöleden in Helsingborg, two cars have collided, and one has driven straight into a bus shelter, the police write on their website.

    There are no reports of personal injuries.

    The police are on the scene and are collecting witness information and documenting the accident scene.

  • Argument in parking lot – police on site

    The police were alerted at 9.15pm to a car park in Rosengård in Malmö after reports of a fight involving several people.

    One person suffered minor injuries and the police have opened a preliminary investigation into assault.

  • Complete standstill on E6 after accident

    Two cars are involved in an accident on the E6 just before Kvibille, in the southbound direction.

    The accident causes a complete stop in the southbound direction, reports Hallandsposten.

    – Two cars are involved and have, among other things, driven into the center barrier. Right now there is a complete stop in the southbound direction, says Peter Karlborg at the rescue service to the newspaper.

  • Drunken men have quarreled with the high guard

    Operation at the castle. Photo: Blue light images

    Two men have been taken into custody by the police at the Palace in Stockholm.

    The alarm came in shortly before 8 p.m.

    – There are two drunk people who have argued with the security guard. It is about some form of drunkenness, says Robert Sennerdahl, press spokesperson at the police.

    The men are aged 20 to 25.

    At present, the persons are not suspected of crimes.

  • National curfew in Bangladesh

    Student protests in Bangladesh on Thursday. Photo: Rajib Dhar/AP

    The death toll has risen to 105 after the student demonstrations in Bangladesh, AFP reports.

    Now the authorities are introducing a national curfew. The military has also been called in to break up the demonstrations in the country.

    The violent student protests broke out in early July.

    The students demand that the government change the employment rules for the public sector in the country – which are now based on a quota system.

    During the week, the clashes between protesters and riot police have escalated.

  • Gothia cup player seriously injured after accident at bathhouse

    A boy in his early teens has been taken to hospital after a drowning accident in a bathhouse in Alingsås.

    – It is a guy who has been found in the bath lifeless, says Niklas Ehnfors, communications manager at the municipality, to GP.

    Emergency services were called to the bath house at 5 p.m.

    According to Niklas Ehnfors, the boy plays in a foreign team that participates in the Gothia cup.

    – Right now we are working to get a picture of what happened, while at the same time we have crisis support for the football team that has been affected, and also the bathhouse staff who are shocked by what has happened, he tells the newspaper.

    Read more here.

  • Bicycle batteries are portable – “great explosive power”

    Batteries for electric bicycles may be prohibited in workplaces and public premises. Archive image. Photo: Fredrik Sandberg/TT

    Several workplaces and public premises do not allow batteries for electric bicycles to be brought in.

    On Thursday, a battery for an electric bicycle exploded in an apartment in Malmö. It caused a heavy fire and eight people had to go to hospital, including two police officers.

    It was not the first time that a bicycle battery caused great damage. The number of fires connected to the charging of electrical gadgets has increased sharply in recent years, as more and more products become rechargeable.

    Since June, patients and visitors to Region Skåne’s premises have been met by signs with the message that it is forbidden to bring removable batteries for electric bicycles or electric scooters inside.

    Several other regions in the country have similar bans. And the country’s authorities have also introduced restrictions depending on how the business looks.

  • The flight was canceled – windows were smashed with shoes

    A man in his 50s became angry when the flight was canceled from Arlanda Airport on Friday.

    Then he took a shoe and threw it into a window pane which cracked.

    The incident occurred at Terminal 5 of the airport.

    The man is now suspected of vandalism.

  • Blink: Approaching the truce

    US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Friday that a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas is approaching, writes NRK.

    – There are still some problems that have to be solved and that still have to be negotiated. We are working on it, Blinken told a security forum in Colorado according to NRK.

  • The senator calls on Biden to drop out

    Martin Heinrich. Photo: Mariam Zuhaib / AP

    Another Democrat is calling on Joe Biden to drop out as the party’s presidential candidate.

    This time it is Senator Martin Heinrich:

    “Joe Biden is one of the most skilled presidents of modern times,” he writes in a statement.

    He continues:

    “The decision to step aside is entirely President Biden’s. I believe it is in our nation’s best interest for him to do so.”

    Heinrich is the third senator to call on Biden to drop out of the presidential race.

    In the past, Adam Schiff and Lloyd Doggett have also called on the president to step aside.

  • Eleven young people with Foxtrot connection are sentenced

    A total of eleven young people with connections to the criminal network Foxtrot are sentenced for attacks and preparations for attacks last fall, Attunda District Court writes in a press release.

    A boy, who was 15 years old at the time of the acts, is sentenced, among other things, for aggravated arson and preparation for public destruction. Another boy, also 15 years old at the time of the execution, is sentenced, among other things, for incitement.

    A man in his 20s is sentenced to six years in prison and deportation, among other things, for inciting various young people to set fire to homes in several cases.

    The crimes took place at night. In two cases, the perpetrators set fire to the front door while the plaintiffs, including children, were sleeping.

    Those who were under 18 at the time of the acts are sentenced to juvenile penalties. Only three of the eleven were of legal age.

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