How gang violence took hold of Sweden – in five
charts
Scandinavian country has second highest gun crime
death rate in Europe, with poverty and inequality among driving factors
Viktor
Sunnemark
Thu 30 Nov
2023 14.52 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/nov/30/how-gang-violence-took-hold-of-sweden-in-five-charts
Sweden is
in the grip of a rise in gang violence and shootings that has taken citizens
and leaders by surprise. In the words of the prime minister, Ulf Kristersson,
this year: “Sweden has never before seen anything like this. No other country
in Europe is seeing anything like this.”
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.
Prominent
members of the far-right Sweden Democrats, now the second-largest grouping in
Sweden’s parliament (their support allowed the current centre-right government
to take power in the 2022 election), have been quick to point the finger at
migration.
However,
the data shows a more complex picture, with the social fortunes of those living
in areas most affected by crime falling behind the living standards of much of
the rest of Sweden.
Sweden’s
gun crime death rate is now the second highest in Europe
Sweden now
has one of the highest gun death rates per capita of any European country for
which there are figures, according to the most recent data from the United
Nations office on drugs and crime (UNODC).
In recent
years, the country has overtaken Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, and Serbia in
terms of deaths per 100,000 population.
It is now
second only to Albania when compared with other European countries with
populations of at least one million, having been in 14th place in 2010.
Poverty is the main driver of crime in violence
hotspots
The Swedish
police have identified a number of “utsatta”, or vulnerable areas, across the
country. These are home to just 5% of the country’s population, but are
connected with the most serious violence.
While these
areas do have high proportions of residents born outside Europe and second- and
third-generation immigrants, they have been shaped by socioeconomic
circumstances over a long period of time, a factor which experts say is of far
greater significance to the current situation.
More than
80% of the underlying statistical areas that make up these “utsatta” are
defined as having socioeconomic challenges, with half of them classed as having
“major” challenges.
Long-term
unemployment rates are above average in the majority of these areas and is
increasing. Meanwhile, the proportion of people at risk of poverty – defined as
an economic standard of less than 60% of the median – is more than twice the
national figure.
“Socioeconomic
factors are what mostly constitute the risks of ending up in crime,” not
ethnicity, says Felipe Estrada Dörner, a professor of criminology at Stockholm
University whose research centres on juvenile delinquency and segregation.
“This is a classic and well known pattern, in Sweden and internationally.”
While some
statistics are going in the right direction – for example, the percentage of
young people not in education or work has decreased over the last 10 years in a
majority of the areas designated vulnerable – more needs to be done.
Estrada
Dörner says accelerating this trend and reversing other aspects of
socioeconomic decline should be prioritised. “In order to slow down the supply
of new recruits to gangs, inequality must be reduced. Harsher punishments,
which the government invests a lot of resources in now, will not overcome those
problems.”
Inequality also plays its part
The income
gap in Sweden has increased in recent decades: according to the latest
statistics, income has not been this unevenly divided for more than 40 years.
This gap
has contributed to the country’s current situation, says Estrada Dörner.
“The
increased inequality in income, health and education over the last decades
leads to the fact that the life chances of children and young people from
different areas will differ more and more,” he said.
Rise in gun
crime accompanied by rise in narcotics offences
“Perhaps
the most important conflicts in organised crime in Sweden are about the
narcotics trade: about who is selling where and what,” Ardavan Khoshnood, a
criminologist and associate professor at Lund University, explains.
He points
to the simultaneous rise in gun crime, bombings and narcotics crimes.
Nearly a third of suspects in gang-related crimes aged
15 to 20
Young
people and children are increasingly being recruited by gangs, authorities say.
Data shows the suspects in crimes connected to gang violence, including
manslaughter, murder and deadly assault, are getting younger.
In 2012,
15- to 20-year-olds made up 16.9% of all suspects for such crimes; by 2022 that
figure stood at 29.7%.
The same
trend is even starker when it comes to gun crime: less than a quarter (23.6%)
of suspects in gun-related murder and manslaughter offences were aged between
15 and 20 a decade ago; in 2022 it was closer to half (45.1%), according to
data from the Swedish National Council for Crime Prevention.
This trend
cannot be explained by a wider trend towards criminality among young people.
Since 2013, the number of people in the 15 to 20 age group suspected of crime
in general has not changed much and has actually decreased since 2020.
“From a
criminological perspective, one would think … that the trend is the same for
all youth crime. But it doesn’t really look like that,” Estrada Dörner said,
adding that this was a sign of “fewer but worse”.
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