After former UKIP leader Nigel Farage branded Sweden's third-largest and "most multicultural" city of Malmö "the rape capital of Europe," Johansson's efforts to defend her homeland flopped bitterly, as she falsely claimed sex attacks to be "going down, and going down and going down."
Her comment, however, had a severe backlash, as Johansson was subsequently accused of airing "fake news" by fellow members of parliament and experts alike, including senior Concervative MP Elisabeth Svantesson. Criminologists and ordinary users armed with statistics flocked to social media to point out the Minister's blatant mistake. In 2016 alone, a 13 percent increase in sex crimes was reported together with a steep general upward trend over the last decade. In some places, such as the city of Uppsala, sexual violence has risen 60 percent last year alone, Swedish news outlet Nyheter Idag reported.
Bra att ministern backar för det är allvarligt när en regeringsmedlem sprider fake news. pic.twitter.com/2eqxqq5p92
— Elisabeth Svantesson (@ElisabethSvan) March 4, 2017
However, former Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt, who in August 2014 advocated for a more liberal immigration policy with a fiery "Open Your Hearts" speech, denied statistics, claiming crime to reduce over time and ascribing the recent spike to broader definitions and people's readiness to report crimes, Aftonbladet reported.
However, a 2014 report by the US State Department estimated the number of Muslims in Sweden at 600,000 (or 6 percent of the Swedish population of 10 million). However, the percentage of Muslims is expected to have risen further following the influx of migrants from predominantly Muslim countries.
According to estimates by the Pew Research Center, the share of Muslims is expected to increase to 9.9 percent of the population by 2030. In contrast, there were only 15 Muslims throughout Sweden in 1930.
In a series of tweets, Strage attacked "Swedish" districts, calling them boring "no-go areas," since there was allegedly no reason to go there, yet hailed real "no-go areas" that pose real threats, since "at least something" was happening there. When asked about it by the local newspaper Liljeholmen/Älvsjö, Strage argued that Swedish suburbs were so boring that they gave him a "death wish." Unsurprisingly, Strage is a resident in the affluent Kungsholmen district in central Stockholm.
Hej Strage, varför hatar du Gröndal? @StockholmDirekt https://t.co/4KlNCAhc0B pic.twitter.com/t8J3Enpw0c
— Andreas Jennische (@a_jennische) March 1, 2017
Meanwhile, Sweden is still struggling with the aftermath of the migrant crisis. In 2016, the total expenditure of the Swedish Migration Board amounted to 73 billion SEK ($8,1bln), Swedish economic newspaper Affärsvärlden reported.
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