The diesel almost under 17 again

The diesel almost under 17 again

NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS

  • The diesel almost under 17 again

    Cheaper drops. Archive image. Photo: Pontus Lundahl/TT

    The fuel chains lower the price of diesel and petrol. Prices are thus approaching SEK 17 per liter again since the oil price on the world market fell last week.

    Diesel is reduced by 15 öre per liter and now costs SEK 17.09. Petrol is reduced by 10 öre to SEK 17.24 a litre, according to the recommended prices at manned stations.

    At the beginning of October, both diesel and petrol cost less than SEK 17. In between, the price was up around 17.60 around 14 October.

  • THREE NEWS YOU CAN’T MISS

  • Airplane collided with fox at Bromma airport

    During Monday morning, a plane hit a fox on the runway at Bromma Airport.

    The emergency services are on site together with several ambulances.

    – The aircraft has taken off and is now circling overhead. We do not know more about the situation at the moment but we have many units in place. I can’t go into how many, says Fredrik Hilmersson, line operator at Stockholm’s fire brigade.

    According to the rescue service, the aircraft has now landed at Arlanda for inspection and the airport is taking over the matter.

    – We can confirm that a small passenger plane landed at Arlanda at 8.30 and that it went well, says Ellen Laurin, deputy press manager at Swedavia.

  • A car has overturned in central Stockholm

    Just after half past seven, the police were called to Vanadisplan in central Stockholm where a car had overturned.

    – It is a driver who drove into a parked car and then overturned, it is on the roof and the driver has now been taken away by ambulance, says police spokesperson Per Fahlström.

    – He should not be life-threateningly injured, says Fahlström.

    The police have drawn up a report about carelessness in traffic.

  • Fethullah Gülen is dead

    Fethullah Gülen. Photo: Chris Post/AP

    The Turkish preacher Fethullah Gülen is dead, reports the Reuters news agency. He was 83 years old.

    Gülen is the founder of the Gülen movement, which has been classified as a terrorist by Turkey.

    He was accused of being behind an attempted coup in Turkey in 2016 and of trying to infiltrate the state.

    The accusations came, among other things, from Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, with whom he was formerly an ally.

    Fethullah Gülen himself has denied any involvement in the coup attempt. Since 1999, he has lived in self-imposed exile in the United States.

    Read more here.

  • Gunnar Strömmer after the Stockholm derby

    The scandalous scenes and the police’s decision to revoke Hammarby’s permit in yesterday’s Stockholm derby have attracted criticism.

    Minister of Justice Gunnar Strömmer is now commenting on the matter in SVT’s Morgonstudion.

    – Everyone agrees that it is not acceptable, he says.

    Read more about yesterday’s chaos derby here.

  • Car thieves tried to steal with the help of a municipal car

    Masked people attacked the haulage company. Photo: JOAKIM ERIKSSON

    During the early hours of Monday morning, masked people tried to steal cars at Hedströms Åkeri in Svenljunga.

    On their website, the police write that the perpetrators used one of Svenljunga’s municipal vehicles as a brick breaker to force the gate to the haulier’s area.

    It is still unclear if any cars are missing from the haulage company.

  • King Charles scolded

    Britain’s King Charles has been received with mixed feelings in Australia, where he is also a monarch.

    During a reception in Parliament in Canberra, he was scolded by Senator Lidia Thorpe for stealing the land from the indigenous people, writes Sky News.

    – Give us our country back! Australia is not your country, and you are not my king, she shouted.

    Lidia Thorpe, who herself belongs to the indigenous population, was taken away by security guards.

    Before the country became independent in 1901, it was a British colony where thousands of Aboriginal people were killed or forcibly relocated.

    Read more here.

  • Sweden is raging on the equality index

    Economic inequality is increasing in Sweden according to the organization Oxfam’s latest equality index. Archive image. Photo: Fredrik Sandberg/TT

    Sweden has fallen 14 places in four years in the organization Oxfam’s global equality index. According to the organization, it is the pursued policy that causes the gaps to increase.

    The index, the Commitment to Reducing Inequality Index (CRII), is produced by Oxfam in collaboration with Development Finance International (DFI).

    CRII ranks 164 countries in the world according to political decisions and their effects on economic equality. The index is compiled every two years and in this year’s edition, Sweden comes in 24th place and is still ranked lowest in the Nordics.

    Read more here.

  • Four dead after helicopter crash in Houston

    4 people died, including a child, in a helicopter crash in Houston, Texas, on Sunday evening.

    The crash occurred just before eight o’clock local time when the helicopter crashed into a radio mast, reports say ABC News.

    No one on the ground was injured in the accident.

  • Even in the election about the EU

    Moldovan President Maia Sandu held a press conference on Sunday. Photo: Vadim Ghirda

    It looks like it will be very, very close in the referendum in Moldova on writing the aspiration for EU membership into the constitution.

    With 97.7 percent of the votes counted, the yes side had 49.9 percent against 50.1 percent for the no side. Only a few thousand votes separated.

    As more of the votes from the capital region of Chisinau, which is counted among the last, were registered, the difference shrank from several percent to a few tenths of a percentage point.

    On election night, Moldovan President Maia Sandu commented on the No leadership as a result of the country’s democracy and freedom being “under attack on an unprecedented scale”.

    According to her, Russian influence operations have been going on for several months.

  • Zelensky warns of North Korea

    North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Un. Archive image. Photo: North Korean KCNA via AP/TT

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says there is clear evidence that North Korea sent soldiers to Russia. He refers to satellite images and video clips.

    – We expect a normal, honest and strong reaction from our partners to this, says Zelenskyy, and warns of what Russia might give North Korea in return:

    – Unfortunately, the instability and threats may grow significantly as North Korea begins to learn modern warfare.

  • Still blackout in Cuba

    Many of Cuba’s eleven million residents have been without power for several days after a power plant failure. Photo: Ramon Espinosa/AP/TT

    The power grid in Cuba has been disconnected again, during the work to restore it after Friday’s total breakdown. Many of the eleven million inhabitants of the island have been without electricity for several days. Now Hurricane Oscar is moving in over land and could worsen the problems.

    “A few minutes ago, the power grid was disconnected again,” Cuba’s energy ministry announced on X at 5 p.m. local time on Sunday.

    The authorities had then only succeeded in getting part of the network up and running after Friday’s breakdown.

  • Several injured in attack on Kharkiv

    At least nine people have been injured in a Russian attack on the large city of Kharkiv in northeastern Ukraine late Sunday night, local authorities said.

    Residential buildings, a gas station and high-voltage power lines have been hit in three different neighborhoods, according to Mayor Ihor Terechov.

    Power has been cut in parts of the city as a result of the attacks.

  • Moldova: Leaning towards no EU rapprochement

    Voting in Moldova’s capital Chisinau on Sunday. Photo: Vadim Ghirda/AP/TT

    It appears to be leaning towards a no in the referendum in Moldova on writing the aspiration for EU membership into the constitution. If so, it is a major setback for President Maia Sandu.

    Opinion polls ahead of Sunday’s referendum, and presidential election, pointed towards a yes to the EU path. But when just over 90 percent of the votes were counted, the no side led with 53.5 percent against 46.4 for a yes, according to the central election commission’s website.

    As well as the White House, the EU Parliament and Moldovan authorities have pointed out that Moscow is trying to influence the election and steer the country away from the EU and the West.

  • Locals stormed Tenerife beach

    Demonstration on Fuerteventura earlier this year. Photo: Europa Press/AP

    Hundreds of people turned out in protest on a popular beach in Tenerife on Sunday, reports say Daily Mail.

    Vacationers had to huddle in their towels while the locals showed their displeasure with mass tourism.

    Many held up placards with messages such as “The Canary Islands are not for sale”, while others beat drums and blew whistles.

    Demonstrations were also held elsewhere in the Canary Islands on Sunday. It comes after a summer where there have been scores of protests in the Spanish holiday resorts.

    Many people think that the long-term tourists in particular take too much of the resources and push up accommodation prices.

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