Characteristics of the Wilma case detained in “Wanted”



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It was Thursday, November 28, 2019 and there was less than an hour left for the broadcast of “Wanted” that week.

The first element of the entire program would be on the case of the then disappeared Wilma Andersson, 17, in Uddevalla. At the time, the girl had been missing for two weeks and her boyfriend of five years, Tishko Ahmed, was in custody. For several days, both police and volunteers carried out massive search operations in and around Uddevalla.

Set in the last minute

But just before the broadcast, the deputy chief of police, who was going to tell the latest in the investigation, called the production “Wanted.” He said he had to cancel his participation.

– He will not be interviewed and neither will anyone else, says Hasse Aro in the podcast and continues:

– We understand that something has happened. A finding has been made, it must be investigated and that is why the police cannot comment right now.

The following day, Friday, November 29, last year, the police held a press conference and recounted the fact that made the police leave the TV3 program at the last minute. The police had found a part of the body that allowed them to state with certainty that Wilma Andersson was no longer alive.

Tishko Ahmed at the Court of Appeal.Photo: Lovisa waldeck

He has been sentenced to 18 years in prison.

– We deeply regret that the search for Wilma ended in this tragic way. Our thoughts go to the girl’s family and friends, Commander Lars Eckerdal said then.

Months later, in connection with the prosecution of boyfriend Tishko Ahmed for the murder, police and prosecutors stated that it was Wilma’s head and that it had been found in a closet in the couple’s shared apartment.

Last summer, Tishko Ahmed was sentenced to life in prison for the murder of Wilma Andersson. A sentence that was later changed to a fixed-term prison sentence of 18 years in the Court of Appeal a couple of weeks ago.

READ MORE: Tishko Ahmed’s double play after Wilma’s murder, 17

See also:

Wilma’s mother: I never lose hope.

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