
Sweden To Deport Criminal Immigrants After Conviction
Stockholm expects the reform to raise annual deportations to around 3,000—six times the current average.

Stockholm expects the reform to raise annual deportations to around 3,000—six times the current average.

After two viewer complaints, the country’s media watchdog ruled that the wording breached objectivity and impartiality rules—despite its basis in British law.

Eight existing prisons have been tasked with preparing special sections for children.

In a key vote, nearly every Swedish party rejected a bid to tear up the country’s gender self-ID law—including the centre-right Moderates.

Russia’s risk tolerance around Sweden has risen in recent months, prompting new alerts from the country’s military intelligence service.

Right-wing officials say that “step by step” they are “making Sweden safe again.”

Fear of sexual crime in Sweden leaves many women feeling unsafe, with one in three reporting concerns.

Four others have been charged with related crimes and prosecutors have not given up on finding the “instigators” who ordered the murders.

The Sweden Democrats say that the law up till now has been “absurdly generous.”

The country has for years struggled to integrate migrants, with many not even learning Swedish.