The former model country has turned into a real-life nightmare since 2005 as violent crime has exploded higher. After examining data from the Swedish Crime Prevention Council, Germany’s Bild newspaper writes that ‘Sweden is the most dangerous country in Europe.’
Bild, which is Germany’s most widely-read and best-selling newspaper, analysed a study related to fatal gun violence, with the data showing just how dangerous Sweden has become.


‘In the EU, an average of eight people per million people are victims of fatal violence. In Sweden, the number in 2020 was twelve people per million inhabitants. When it comes to the victims of firearms, the difference between Europe and Sweden is even greater. In the EU, an average of 1.6 people per million people die from gunshot wounds, in Sweden the figure is four, almost three times as many,’ Bild writes.
While murders have been steadily falling in other European countries, in Sweden they are rising. Much of the crime is fuelled by migrants and migrant clans, which operate in the country’s biggest cities. Most of the shootings in Sweden are carried out by non-European migrants are related to gang violence.


‘Drug trafficking is a key issue here, and there are close links between shootings and bombings and the drug market,’ the Swedish police said recently when an investigation into gang crime was published.
In fact, the KEY ISSUE here is dumb Swedes voting in the parties that have turned their once beautiful paradise in the worst shithole in Europe. Don’t laugh, your country is in the face for the top spot too. These gangs usually fight in the suburbs of Stockholm, Gothenburg, and Malmö.
These gangs usually fight in the suburbs of Stockholm, Gothenburg, and Malmö.


Why it has become more and more dangerous in Sweden for around 15 years is one of the big questions that numerous experts have been dealing with for a long time. The criminologist Manne Gerell from the University of Malmö gave the Aftenposten newspaper a list of possible causes.
According to Gerell, the three main reasons are the increase in the number of (migrant but never mention the M word) gangs and criminal networks, the poor integration of migrants, and the housing projects of the 1960s and 1970s.

At the end of August, the Swedish Interior Ministry published a 34-point plan designed to help the country fight gang crime in the future, including harsher penalties, more video surveillance, and easier to obtain wiretaps. However, others say that migration to Sweden needs to be brought under control before the issue can truly be tackled. Polling also shows that a majority of Swedes want less immigration to their country.


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