Sweden prepares prisons for 13-year-old gang killers
By Simon
Johnson and Tom Little
June 2,
20262:05 PM GMT+2Updated June 2, 2026
https://www.reuters.com/world/sweden-prepares-prisons-13-year-old-gang-killers-2026-06-02/
Summary
Gangs
recruit children on social media for violent crimes
52
under-15s faced court for murder, attempted murder in 2025
Government
plans to cut age of criminal responsibility to 13
Minors to
face prison rather than social care
Critics
say prison will be ineffective as a deterrent
ROSERSBERG
PRISON, Sweden, June 2 (Reuters) - A surge in gang-related shootings and
bombings over the last decade, dozens of which were carried out by minors, has
set Sweden apart from its European peers and left authorities an urgent problem: what to do with
children who kill.
The
government, in power since 2022 and heading into a tight election in September
where crime is a key issue, says the softly-softly approach of the past has
failed and it's time to get tough by sending children aged under 15 to prison
rather than into social care.
However,
some experts and lawmakers warn this is the wrong approach.
Sweden is
fighting a wave of gang crime, with networks active in drug dealing,
large-scale fraud and robbery that earn them around 185 billion Swedish crowns
($20 billion) a year.
Police
estimate there are 17,500 active gang members and 50,000 associates.
Gangs use social media to recruit teenagers, and in some cases children as
young as 11, to commit murders and bombings across
the Nordics.
UNDER-15S
FACED MURDER OR ATTEMPTED MURDER CHARGES
Under a
proposed new law, the age of criminal responsibility will be lowered to 13 from
15 — below that of most European countries — and minors convicted of the most
serious crimes will be locked up in special prisons. One will take girls.
"We
have an emergency," Justice Minister Gunnar Strommer said in April.
"Last
year, 52 children under the age of 15 were involved in legal trials suspected
of murder or attempted murder. So we're not talking about theft, not even
assault or robbery. We're talking about murder."
Parliament
will vote on the legislation, which will be reviewed after five years, on June
15.
Lowering
the age of responsibility is one new tactic to tackle gang violence, opens new
tab, others include longer prison sentences and expanded police powers.
The
right-wing government says its crackdown is yielding results. Forty-four
people were shot dead in 2025, down from a peak of 62 in 2022. More gang
members are behind bars.
But
stopping gangs recruiting children will be much harder. The government
says prison will act as a deterrent and intensive rehabilitation programmes
will prevent re-offending.
PUBERTY
IN PRISON
At
Rosersberg prison, north of Stockholm, one of three jails being rebuilt for the
most violent teenage offenders, life behind bars
will focus on schooling.
In their
free time, prisoners may watch television, play video games or train in a gym.
Cells will be locked from 8 p.m. each evening.
Prison
Governor Gabriel Wessman expects the first inmates after the summer. The
biggest challenge compared to adult prisoners will be giving the teenagers,
some of whom have never lived away from their parents, comfort and support, he
said.
"They
will grow up in here," he said, adding the prison needs to help them
through puberty. Phones are not allowed, while chess lessons will help concentration. But they also need an
emotional outlet, he said.
"It's
not that uncommon in the outside world that boys at this age have soft toys," Wessman said.
"Maybe we should see that we have one in every cell."
TEENAGE
GANG MEMBERS FREQUENTLY REOFFEND
Until
now, Sweden's worst juvenile offenders have been dealt with by social services.
But that system is widely seen as a failure. Nine out of ten young gang members held in
youth homes relapse, a report by the Swedish National Audit Office said. Eight
out of ten end up in prison as adults.
Incarceration
will protect the public, provide justice for victims and break ties to gangs,
the majority government says.
Critics
worry about the impact on the children.
"A
13-year-old is a child — one who is not even legally old enough to purchase
energy drinks," opposition Centre Party spokeswoman Wilma Roth said.
"Children under 15 who commit serious crimes should be taken into care and
provided treatment, rather than being imprisoned."
Sweden's
law enforcement and prison authorities have also voiced concerns.
Britain
and Northern Ireland — where the age of criminal responsibility is 10 — are debating raising the threshold.
Denmark
experimented with lowering the age of criminal responsibility to 14 in 2010 but
researchers concluded there was no effect on crime levels.
Stockholm
University Criminology Professor Felipe Estrada Dorner said locking up already
marginalised kids risked hurting their life-chances, but that society
needed to be protected.
"We
cannot have murderers walking our streets," he said.
($1 =
9.2957 Swedish crowns)
(This
story has been refiled to remove the repetition of the date of the
parliamentary vote in paragraph 19)
Reporting
by Simon Johnson; editing by Niklas Pollard, Alexandra Hudson

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