?:reviewBody
|
-
This is Part III of a three-part series about crime in Sweden. Read Part I Is Sweden the ‘Rape Capital' of Europe and Part II, Are Refugee Men Overrepresented in Swedish Crime? One of the most persistent myths about crime in Sweden is that some areas are so dangerous due to outlaw asylum seekers that police can't enter them. For example, U.K.-based tabloid Express wrote on 12 February 2017: But Swedish police were quick to tell us that these so-called no-go zones do not exist. The term originated with newspaper columnist Per Gudmundson, who used it to refer to a police report identifying problem areas in the country, where there is a criminal milieu. In these areas, there is high crime, low socioeconomic status, and lack of social integration and cooperation which presents a special challenge to police. But Erik Jansåker, a police chief in Malmö's southern areas (the city is often singled out as a high-crime area), told us that the term no-go zone never appeared in the report itself – and Gudmundson admits as much in his column. However, since he used it, the term has taken hold in the popular imagination. Jansåker’s jurisdiction includes two problem areas, Malmö neighborhoods Rosengård and Seved. He told us that local investigators have been overwhelmed with the caseload from 14 recent murders -- 8 to 10 in the same time span would be normal for the area – but that there aren't areas where police can't go. To drive the point home, one of Janåsker’s employees, Officer Johannes Schultz, took us along on his regular foot patrol of Rosengård. He walked briskly and frequently stopped to greet or chat briefly with citizens. One little boy stepped in his path to ask for a high-five, and Schultz happily obliged. Another child on a scooter smiled at him and sought his attention by calling shyly, Johannes! Schultz said hello. People were out walking and children crowded playgrounds. You're in the 'no-go zone,' Schultz said jokingly. Are you scared? Me neither. It is clear that Schultz and other officers in his cohort spend a lot of time in the neighborhood. He described going out and talking to schoolchildren in an effort to build rapport, and every other person he passed seemed to not only know him, but to like him. Despite the negative attention, Schultz said that Rosengård is a tight-knit community where people look out for each other: Joakim Palmkvist, a crime reporter for the local newspaper Sydsvenskan, explained that what police call problem areas are places where criminals have basically set up a parallel society. It presents a challenge to the work of investigators, not because they are seething pits of violence and anarchy, but because they do not communicate or cooperate with police. Palmkvist explained the phenomenon by using the example of a 19 year old who escaped from one of the country's juvenile detention facilities after being convicted of manslaughter. After escaping, the teen was completely off the grid for four months, in which time he allegedly managed to kill a person. Two months after the murder, he was apprehended again. In the meantime, Palmkvist recalled, Nobody has seen him, there were no transactions, no visa cards, no phone, no contact with relations -- he’s obviously been sleeping somewhere, eating. Somebody’s helped him. But authorities don’t know who. Still, Schultz took us through a busy shopping center in Rosengård where he says new shops are opening up. As in other parts of Sweden, most people here travel on foot or by bicycle. In addition to our foot tour of Rosengård with Schultz, we visited Rinkeby, a suburb of Stockholm. Like Rosengård, it was lively during daylight hours, with young schoolchildren out playing and people everywhere bustling about. Manne Gerell, a criminologist at Malmö University (and a resident of Malmö) told us by e-mail that the neighborhoods identified as problem areas by police are friendly and tight-knit, but that residents have been frightened by recent crimes: The explosives Gerell refers to are a series of attacks using hand grenades. Abdi Jama, who has been a resident of Rosengård since 1991 and loves the community, was defensive when asked about American coverage of Sweden's crime issues: Officer Schultz noted the influential role media coverage plays in generating paranoia. While walking his beat in Rosengård, he told us: Those news reports are a far cry from the experiences of Malmö citizens, however. I don't recognize at all the picture in the media versus what my experience is, Malmö resident Pontus Böckman told us. We feel safe.
(en)
|