• How Sweden's multicultural dream went fatally wrong

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Wed Apr 16 10:27:50 2025
    XPost: or.politics, seattle.politics, ca.politics
    XPost: fl.politics, alt.law-enforcement

    They do not assimilate and they are crazy.

    'How Sweden’s multicultural dream went fatally wrong'

    <https://www.yahoo.com/news/sweden-multi-cultural-dream-went-055041254.html>

    'To show me just how bad gang crime has become in Sweden, all journalist Diamant Salihu has to do is forward a few mobile phone messages. At
    first glance, they look like spam, written in garish fonts and promising
    large sums of money, there to be earned. It’s only on closer examination
    that the purpose of the pistol and skull emojis becomes clear.

    These are so-called “murder ads” – posted online by gang leaders, offering bounties to anyone willing to carry out the hits.

    “All types of jobs are available,” reads one, promising up to one
    million krona (£78,000). “Age doesn’t matter”, adds another – explaining
    why many of Sweden’s new contract killers aren’t hardened hitmen, but children. Part of the problem, some say, is that Swedish law dictates
    anyone aged under 15 is too young to be prosecuted.

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    “We have so many child soldiers that nobody can count anymore,” sighs Salihu, an investigative reporter for SVT, Sweden’s answer to the BBC. “There are kids as young as 13 being arrested.”

    Barely a week passes in Sweden today without a teenager being arrested
    for such a hit, keeping Salihu extremely busy, and the public in the
    grip of a national crisis like no other before it. A softly-spoken
    former tabloid journalist, the 41-year-old could be a character from a Scandi-noir novel, shining light in society’s darker corners. The body
    count on his beat, though, is far higher than any Stieg Larsson novel,
    and holds out little prospect of a satisfactory ending.

    Diamant Salihu
    Journalist and author Diamant Salihu: ‘We have so many child soldiers
    that nobody can count anymore’ - Thron Ullberg
    For the story he has pursued for the last decade is, in effect, one
    giant, unsolved murder mystery: why has Sweden, long the envy of the
    rest of Europe for its peace and prosperity, suddenly seeing so many
    gangland killings?

    Why, in a land that prides itself on welcoming migrants, are so many
    gang members from migrant communities? And is it Swedish society that is
    the ultimate culprit, or the migrant communities themselves?

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    They are questions he has already addressed in two best-selling books of reportage, both kicking a hornet’s nest that liberal Sweden long
    preferred to leave well alone. His first, Until Everyone Dies,
    chronicled a war between two Somali street gangs that left nine young footsoldiers dead.

    His latest, When Nobody’s Listening, charts the upper echelons of
    Swedish crime, as revealed through the police cracking of Encrochat, the encrypted mobile phone service used by gangsters Europe-wide.

    A social media post advertising a contract killing for one million
    Swedish Krone (&#xa3;78k)
    A social media post advertising a contract killing for one million
    Swedish Krone (£78k)
    It is published in translation this month in Britain – a place where
    Salihu, himself a migrant of Kosovan stock, first observed cracks in the multi-cultural model while working as a foreign correspondent for the
    Swedish tabloid Expressen.

    During the six months he spent reporting for the newspaper in London, he covered the aftermath of the 2011 riots, in which gangs played a
    significant role. Two years later, he found himself reporting the same
    story at home, when riots in broke out in inner-city neighbourhoods
    across Sweden. Interviewing local youths, Salihu heard the standard
    complaints about joblessness and alienation, but couldn’t help asking
    himself one awkward question.

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    “In the Swedish areas that have social problems, I didn’t see the same
    bad standard of housing and class differences that I saw in the UK,” he
    tells me by Zoom from Sweden. “So why, when we in Sweden have a
    generally better standard of living, do we have this escalation of
    violence?”

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    It is a question that the rest of Sweden’s 10 million citizens are now
    asking too, in the wake of a decade-long surge of violence that peaked
    at 62 deadly shootings in 2022. That was twice the figure for England
    and Wales, which have six times the population, and ranked Sweden second
    only to Albania that year for gun deaths per capita in Europe.

    Ageing biker clans that were once Sweden’s best-known street gangs have
    been supplanted by ethnic mafias from the Balkans and Middle East – most notably the Kurdish-led Foxtrot group, which looms large in Salihu’s new book. Foxtrot is prominent in Sweden’s drug trade, although much of its activity might more aptly be termed “disorganised crime”. It pioneered
    the online bounty system, lending out guns and grenades to any teenager
    seeking to make a name. With police struggling to keep up, even small provincial towns have witnessed shootings and bombings.

    Swedish police
    Swedish police have decrypted a messaging service used by criminals
    called Encrochat - AFP
    Gang kingpins, meanwhile, are eulogised by rappers and so-called “gangfluencers”, a term that made the Swedish Language Council’s list of new words back in 2021. As Ulf Kristersson, the country’s centre-Right
    prime minister, laments: “Sweden has never seen anything like it
    before.”

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    Nor, Salihu adds, is it just youngsters from migrant “ghettoes” claiming the bounties. “We also now see Swedish kids involved – some from broken backgrounds, but some whose parents are successful. All they’ve maybe
    done before is steal something or play truant, now they’re getting
    involved in murder.”

    A video obtained by The Telegraph late last year showed what appeared to
    be a 14-year-old assassin carrying out a contract killing for a
    narcotics gang. The footage shows the teen, armed with a Kalashnikov
    rifle, firing a spray of bullets towards the front door of a property
    within an apartment block. It was said to have been filmed to prove the
    killing was carried out.

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    So what has gone wrong? Part of the blame, Salihu says, is down to the
    social blights common to most of Europe’s more impoverished multi-racial neighbourhoods. Joblessness and discrimination limit many youngsters’
    sense of prospects. TV gang dramas, meanwhile, often “highlight the
    flashy parts of gang life – money, respect, power – but leave out the trauma, manipulation, and tragic consequences.”

    Yet the sense of failure is all the more acute in Sweden, long an open
    door compared to other European nations. Ever since the 1960s, when it
    first styled itself as a humanitarian superpower, it has taken in those
    fleeing trouble abroad, be it Americans fleeing the Vietnam war draft,
    Soviet dissidents, or Iraqis fleeing Saddam Hussein’s regime. In the
    1990s came refugees from the Balkans, and in the last decade asylum
    seekers from Syria, Afghanistan and sub-Saharan Africa have arrived.
    Anxious not to create “parallel societies”, Swedish governments have
    long funded social integration programmes alongside the waves of
    migration.

    Ulf Kristersson
    On the subject of the deadly rise of gang crime, Ulf Kristersson, the country’s centre-Right prime minister has said that ‘Sweden has never
    seen anything like it before’ - Getty
    But parallel societies have sprung up regardless, according to Salihu,
    who lived until the age of eight on his family’s farm in Kosovo, where
    even cars were a luxury.

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    “We had a horse and cart, like in the Borat movies,” he says. The family fled ahead of the war with Serbia in 1998, which saw their home burned
    down, settling in a provincial town in central Sweden.

    “I remember my mother breaking down in tears when she learned that her brother had been killed while fighting in the war,” Salihu recalls.
    “I’ve always felt that if I’d stayed in Kosovo, I might not be alive today.”

    Even back then, about 20 per cent of his new Swedish classmates were
    migrants like him. But he also mixed with kids whose parents had college educations and second homes – a vision of the Swedish dream to aspire
    to. Today, he says, his old neighbourhood no longer even glimpses that
    dream.

    “I went back there in 2014 as a journalist, and basically every kid in
    the school was now from a migrant background,” he says. “That makes it harder for them to learn Swedish properly, and they won’t see what I saw
    as a child. Society has become much more segregated. Swedes welcome
    people from every corner of the world, but don’t actually want to live
    with them as neighbours.”

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    Salihu doesn’t blame it all on racism, however. In his new book, for
    example, he writes of gang-plagued areas where single mothers are often
    raising eight children alone. Many gang members he interviews,
    meanwhile, don’t blame society or their parents, but “actively choose
    their lifestyle”.

    “They’ve had all the opportunities, with siblings who’ve graduated and got good jobs, yet still they’ve chosen the bad path.”

    The “bad path”, unfortunately, is open to anyone who chooses to answer a murder ad. Recruits are sometimes directed to their targets via live smart-phone feeds, and then ordered to film their handiwork. Last
    December, a killer using Go Pro footage filmed himself gunning down a Syrian-born rapper, Ninos Khouri, in a multi-storey car-park.

    Gang leaders also cultivate cult presences on social media, their
    followers often taking exception to less-than-flattering coverage by journalists like Salihu. When one former Foxtrot affiliate, Mustapha al-Jubouri, broadcast a video revealing he had faked his own death –
    waving a golden Kalashnikov around to prove he was still alive – his
    acolytes singled out Salihu for criticism on a live Instagram feed. “It
    was being watched by 20,000 people,” says Salihu, who keeps his home
    address secret. “How could Instagram not do something about that,
    knowing what kind of people are involved, inciting murder and
    threatening journalists?”

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    Sweden’s gang menace is also spreading overseas, including to Britain.
    In 2022, Anis Hemissi, a kickboxer of Tunisian descent, was jailed in
    the UK for murdering Flamur Beqiri, a Swedish-Albanian drug kingpin
    gunned down outside his home in Battersea.

    Anis Hemissi
    Anis Hemissi, a kickboxer of Tunisian descent, was jailed in the UK for murdering Flamur Beqiri
    Swedish police are also hunting a 25-year-old gangster suspected of
    murdering two British travel agents, Juan Cifuentes and Farooq
    Abdulrazak, shot dead during a business trip to the city of Malmö last
    July. Their families insist they had no gang connections.

    To complicate matters, many gangsters also have bolt-holes in the Middle
    East, where family connections sometimes shield them from arrest.
    Al-Jubouri issued his “comeback” video from Iraq, while Foxtrot’s
    leader, Rawa “The Fox” Majid, fled to Turkey six years ago, taking citizenship to avoid extradition. He reportedly owned a luxury flat in Istanbul, from where he continued to wage gang feuds remotely before
    then apparently fleeing to Iran.

    With the far-Right, anti-immigrant Swedish Democrats now attracting one
    in five of Swedish voters, the government has been trying to push back
    on the gang problem. Jail terms have been increased significantly for juveniles, who used to get away with as little as three years’ custody
    for murder.

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    Thanks to the cracking of Encrochat – which let police forces all over
    Europe eavesdrop on gangsters’ plans – around 400 Swedish criminals have been jailed.

    Lawyers pictured during a drug trial that followed the decryption of
    encryption softwares Encrochat and Sky ECC
    Lawyers pictured during a drug trial that followed the decryption of
    encryption softwares Encrochat and Sky ECC - AFP
    Swedish politicians are also calling for curbs on social media use to
    stop the “murder ads” – something Salihu warns could also spread to the UK. “You too may end up with British child soldiers, just as we are
    facing this crisis in Sweden,” he says. He points out that while
    Britain’s tougher firearms laws mean shootings are less frequent, knife
    crime is almost as bad: in the 12 months to March 2024, 57 under-25s
    died in stabbings, 17 of them under 16.

    But while Sweden’s gun killings have now dipped – last year saw 45 – Salihu fears the underlying cause for the violence continues to lurk. He
    also points out that the gang footsoldiers are now attracting far more dangerous paymasters than common criminals. A year ago, Swedish
    officials accused Iran of recruiting local gang members for attacks on
    Israeli interests in Europe, including Israel’s Stockholm Embassy, where
    a live grenade was found in the grounds.

    Last month, Washington sanctioned the Foxtrot network over the attacks,
    saying The Fox had “specifically cooperated” with Tehran. With that in mind, Salihu fears it may one day not just be gangsters who live in fear
    of being targeted by “murder ads”.

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    “If we allow these criminals to become more powerful, I fear that our democratic institutions will come under pressure, be it prosecutors, or journalists – I myself would feel much more afraid,” Salihu adds. “These guys are predators. You have to stand up to them, not back off.”'

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