Sweden - Two bodies found in burned-out car, Malmö, 14 July 2024

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Rikissa

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On Sunday July 14 the police in Malmö (Sweden's third largest city) found a burned-out car in an industrial area, and two dead bodies were discovered in the car. The car had been hired earlier that day at the airport in Copenhagen, Denmark, on the other side of the Öresund Bridge, about 30 minutes away. The bodies have not yet been identified, but the police believe they are those of two missing UK business men who travelled to Denmark on Saturday.


 
I always thought Sweden was super safe and had a low crime rate. However a Google fetched this article up from last year...

'Since 2013 the number of fatal shootings in the country has more than doubled, according to official statistics, and drug and gun crimes have steadily increased since the beginning of the 2000s. Kristersson’s remark about Europe was not wrong: the country is now among the continent’s worst when it comes to gun murders.
Much of the violence has taken place in the larger cities: Stockholm, Gothenburg, Malmö and Uppsala. The gun-murder rate in the Swedish capital was roughly 30 times that of London on a per capita basis in 2022. However, the unrest has spread to smaller cities'

Source :- How gang violence took hold of Sweden – in five charts
 
Asked about the incident, a Foreign Office spokesperson told the BBC: “We are supporting the families of two British men reported missing in Sweden and are in touch with the local authorities."

Police spokesman Patrtic Sors told the BBC he would not confirm the identity of the two men after reports in local media that they were believed to be British citizens, with more forensic testing to take place Wednesday morning.

Mr Sors said he believed a British man had rented the car, a black Danish-registered Toyota Rav 4, at an airport in Denmark hours before the bodies were discovered in the Fosie industrial area of Malmö.
 
''Police in Sweden say the Toyota RAV4 set ablaze on an industrial estate in gang-scarred Malmo was the same car rented by Juan, 33, and Farooq, 37 - and they have not been seen since driving away in it.

Authorities are in the process of formally identifying both bodies but families of the men are fearing the worst.''
Farooq  Abdulrazak (left) and Juan Cifuentes (right) are believed to be the two men found

Farooq Abdulrazak (left) and Juan Cifuentes (right) are believed to be the two men found
The men are believed to have travelled to Denmark before heading to Sweden for business

The men are believed to have travelled to Denmark before heading to Sweden for business
Juan (L) and Farooq (C) travelled to Denmark together before heading on to Sweden

n (L) and Farooq (C) travelled to Denmark together before heading on to Sweden
Forensic teams are working to confirm the identities of the Brits found in Sweden
 
I always thought Sweden was super safe and had a low crime rate. However a Google fetched this article up from last year...

'Since 2013 the number of fatal shootings in the country has more than doubled, according to official statistics, and drug and gun crimes have steadily increased since the beginning of the 2000s. Kristersson’s remark about Europe was not wrong: the country is now among the continent’s worst when it comes to gun murders.
Much of the violence has taken place in the larger cities: Stockholm, Gothenburg, Malmö and Uppsala. The gun-murder rate in the Swedish capital was roughly 30 times that of London on a per capita basis in 2022. However, the unrest has spread to smaller cities'

Source :- How gang violence took hold of Sweden – in five charts
Sweden is still basically a safe country, both for those living here, as well as for tourists and visitors. When it comes to the gun crimes, in almost all cases, be it fatal or non-fatal ones, both the perpetrators (if found) and the victims have been involved in an ongoing drug turf war, mostly in and around the suburbs of Stockholm (Swedish suburbs are very often apartment buildings, built in the 1970s and forward, not so much single family homes). During the last ten years or so there have also been more bomb attacks by the same gangs involved in the shootings, which has caused damage for people not involved in the drug gangs, even if the bombs have been directed towards gang members and/or their relatives.

It's first in the last five, six years or so that people not involved in the drug gangs have began being injured or killed, one reason for that is most likely that the perpetrators doing the shootings have become younger and younger, teenagers, and (my guess) often high on drugs when doing the shootings. Several of the victims have been involved in the rap music scene, glorifying gang violence. The probably most famous rapper shot was Einár, only 19 when he died.

As for the case in Malmö, it's very possible that it has to do with drugs in some way, the place where the men were found shot and burned is not a place people visit on a weekend unless you don't want to be seen.
 

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