Sweden will rush through legislation to allow police to wiretap children under the age of 15.
is currently grappling with a involving teenagers, hired for offences ranging from spying and vandalism to bombings and .
In an attempt to get a grip on the crisis, the government plans to rush through legislation allowing police to wiretap children under 15, Swedish Prime Minister announced on Thursday (January 30).
The original plan was to have the law ready by the summer of 2026, but the legislation’s pace has now changed dramatically.
“We are pushing the legislation to enter into force in the fall of 2025 … This is important to get at those who often sit far away and order crimes of children in Sweden,” said Kristersson at a press conference after an unusual meeting with the country’s council against organised crime.
Teenagers are being increasingly hired by gangs through social media, particularly Telegram, to commit crime..
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During January there was an average of one blast per day, according to the Swedish Justice Minister.
“During the month of January, there has been an average of one blast per day. That trend must of course be broken,” Swedish Justice Minister Gunnar Strömmer said on Wednesday.
Explosions in Stockholm have become so frequent the city’s estate agents are listing “no bombings” in their “pro” columns when advertising properties for neighbourhoods buyers might be unfamiliar with.
One blast last month saw , while one last year resulted in a 20-year-old recently graduated teacher being killed.
According to the police, many of the teenagers are very young and are being hired from abroad. Based on the police data, around 600 criminals targeting Sweden live abroad.
“We see 12-, 13- and 14-year-olds carry out horrific violent assignments as if they were extra jobs,” said Sweden’s national chief Petra Lundh. “The assignments are communicated completely openly on digital marketplaces. Crime is often controlled by gang criminals who are abroad.”
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Sweden is also attempting to crack down on the tech platforms to force them to stop gang recruitment and has asked the to step in, according to .
The country reportedly also has as many as , which are so overrun by violence that police cannot carry out their duties there. They are now being described as “parallel societies”.
Data published last year showed that Sweden’s gang violence has escalated to the point where its homicide rate linked to warfare between organised criminal groups is now one of the biggest in .
Last May, Göran Adamson, a Senior Lecturer in Sociology at Uppsala University told Express.co.uk that the and that his country was becoming a “capital of violence”.