Stig Östlund

tisdag, september 28, 2021

 


At least 25 injured after explosion at block of flats in Gothenburg

Swedish police say resultant fire is under control as emergency services rule out gas leak as the cause

Smoke billows from an apartment building after an explosion in Annedal, central Gothenburg
Emergency services said they were working to put out fires in the apartment building. Photograph: Björn Larsson Rosvall/AP
Reuters in Gothenburg

Police are investigating whether an explosive device was left in an apartment building after four people were seriously hurt in an explosion and fire in the Swedish city of Gothenburg.

About 25 people were taken to hospital after the blast on Tuesday morning set ablaze the building in a central residential area. Firefighters pulled people from the building while others used tied sheets to lower themselves from balconies as grey smoke billowed out of stairwells and windows.

Three women and one man were treated for serious injuries, a Sahlgrenska University hospital spokesperson said. Swedish public services radio SR reported that about 25 people had been taken to hospitals around Sweden’s second largest city.

The Nordic country has contended with surging gang crime in recent years, with rival groups employing explosives and firearms to settle scores.

“It’s terrible,” the interior minister, Mikael Damberg, told TT news agency. “I have great confidence in the police authority and that it uses all the resources required to sort out what has happened.”

Police, who opened an investigation, said the fire was under control and that tenants had been evacuated. Emergency services ruled out a gas leak as the cause.

“We believe something has exploded that is not of natural causes,” a police spokesman, Thomas Fuxborg, told a news conference, adding that something had “probably” been placed at the site of the explosion.

Emergency services said they were working to put out fires in the apartment building. They refrained from speculating on the cause of the explosion.

Anja Almen, who lives in the building, said she heard a commotion from the street just after 5am – about 15 minutes after the explosion.

“I went out on the balcony and I was shocked. There was smoke everywhere, from every stairwell,” she said, from a nearby church to which she and other tenants were evacuated. “Fire trucks with ladders were pulling people from apartments.”

A report this year showed that Sweden in the last two decades has gone from having one of the lowest rates of gun violence in Europe to one of the highest.

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