Earlier this month, police is Oskarshamn, Kalmar County (population 18,000) announced they would take part in the evening jogging rounds to boost the feeling of security among locals.
Joggers, who have come to feel more and more insecure after dark, will thus be able to share the company of police officers equipped with weapons, batons and handcuffs. A special vest has been developed to make it easier to keep pace with the joggers.
"We have heard a number of times that women feel a general [sense of] insecurity when they are out in the evening," police inspector Peter Karlsson told the local Östra Småland newspaper, adding that the initiative will be implemented outside of regular police working hours.
Peter Karlsson noted that people in Oskarshamn feel increasingly unsafe when it's dark outside, but argued that real crime is probably not as common as some people think.
"There is a perceived insecurity more than a real one. Not much happens here, but people are affected by what is happening elsewhere in the world and can feel unsafe when it's dark," Karlsson told national broadcaster SVT.
The first 'trial run' would include three police jogs.
However, the story came into the international limelight after former UKIP leader Nigel Farage spoke on the initiative on radio station LBC.
"Who would have believed I would have said that about a Swedish city just five years ago? It is truly incredible," Farage was quoted as saying.
Residents of Oskarshamn in Sweden will now be accompanied by armed police officers while out jogging. How did Europe let this happen? pic.twitter.com/oGwauhys6r
— Nigel Farage (@Nigel_Farage) November 23, 2017
Following Farage's comments, anti-immigration Italian party Lega Nord also commented on Sweden's jogging initiative, suggesting a link between armed policemen and a rise in immigrant crime.
"This is the small price you pay for multiculturalism," said Lega Nord leader Umberto Bossi.
"You don't really know whether to laugh or to cry. Unfortunately, there are always people who interpret things to suit their own agenda," Pleijel said, arguing that the measure was simply aimed at increasing the sense of security of the community.
Peter Karlsson, the man behind the initiative, was appalled by the insinuations.
"It's absolutely horrible. It has nothing to do with immigration — why we started this safety jog," Karlsson told Swedish Radio. "It's not that we are overtaken by crimes here in Oskarshamn," he added, adding that everything could be used for propaganda purposes.
Meanwhile, a security report compiled by Brå indicated a rising feeling of insecurity among Swedes. About half of respondents in south Malmö and Botkyrka, both previously listed as vulnerable areas by the Swedish police, said they were afraid to go out in the evening. However, the relatively calm town of Ystad, surprisingly, led the "anxiety poll" with 58 percent, SVT reported.