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He compares it to another open door, as he described it, in 2015 when the police leadership began talking about vulnerable areas and listed a number of people particularly affected.
– The problem that we see now, with criminals who use families and relatives as a platform, requires very comprehensive comprehensive measures of the whole society, in a sustainable way, says Löfving in Agenda.
– We perceive that we are guilty of this, not least all these good people who are in vulnerable areas because this generates a lot of insecurity, he continues.
It was in an interview with Eko on Swedish radio. Last Saturday as Löfving claimed that there are at least 40 family-based criminal networks in Sweden, clans, who came here just to “organize and systematize” crime.
The statement received a lot of attention and has intensified the already intense debate on gang crime. In the interview on Agenda, she backed off a bit and said that at least several of the 40 had come to Sweden with the intention of committing a crime.
According to the police, the networks “threaten the system.”
Read more:
Parts of the police don’t want to talk about the concept of clans
Magdalena Andersson: How to Stop Grant Fraud
The National Police Commissioner is positive about the investigation of the criminalization of gang membership
Thornberg in family networks: a great threat to society in the long term
The Expert: That’s why we should call them clans