Sweden on Wednesday announced it would push for tougher sentences for younger offenders in a bid to combat a rising wave of gang violence.
The government will seek parliamentary approval to abolish the automatic reduction of sentences for defendants aged 18-20 convicted of serious crimes, such as murder, manslaughter, rape, armed robbery and gun crime, Justice Minister Morgan Johansson said.
"It's better to try to target the crimes committed by those who do these crimes in a systematic way and live a criminal lifestyle," Johansson told a press conference.
Sweden has been struggling for several years to deal with the rise of criminal gangs and the resulting increase in fatal shootings and score settling in an otherwise peaceful country.
Sweden has the highest number of deadly shootings per capita in Europe, according to a report published in May by the Swedish National Council for Crime Prevention.
In 2020, the country of just over 10 million people registered more than 360 incidents involving firearms, with 47 deaths and 117 injuries.
Most of the victims and perpetrators were under the age of 30.
In the latest such incident, two children, aged five and six, were wounded by stray bullets while playing in the neighborhood of Visattra in southern Stockholm over the weekend in what is believed to have been a gang-related shooting.
In early July, a police officer was killed in a shooting in Gothenburg, although he was not believed to have been the target.
(Source: AFP)