Following Christmas murders in Rönninge and Boden, the Swedish government aims to introduce a concrete zero vision against men's violence towards women. A new minister council, led by Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson, will coordinate efforts between the justice system, social services, and healthcare. Several legal changes, including security detention for high-risk individuals, will take effect next year.
The Swedish government has, in response to the high-profile murders during the Christmas period in Rönninge and Boden, outlined plans for a concrete zero vision against men's violence towards women. In a debate article in Aftonbladet, Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson (M) states that every woman who dies from violence by a man is a massive failure. 'We now have a great responsibility towards those women who can no longer speak for themselves, and whose lives were taken from them. Let us honor their memory by doing everything in our power to ensure that what must not happen cannot happen again,' he emphasizes.
To achieve the zero vision, a special minister council will be established in the Government Offices, led by Kristersson himself. The council includes Justice Minister Gunnar Strömmer (M), the equality minister, the social minister responsible for psychiatry, the social services minister, and representatives from relevant authorities. It is modeled on the existing council against organized crime and aims to systematize collaboration between the justice system, social services, and healthcare. The government will soon provide details on the design.
Previous measures include removing secrecy barriers between social services and police, as well as harsher penalties for repeated gross rapes. Next year, three criminal law changes will be implemented: restrictions on early release, tougher penalties for rape, and the new sanction of security detention. This allows individuals with high recidivism risk for serious crimes to be detained indefinitely, even without mental disorder, starting in April 2026. Justice Minister Strömmer stresses: 'It should not be life-threatening to be a woman in Sweden, and it is crucial that dangerous men are locked up so that women dare to be out.'
Kristersson describes a perspective shift from perpetrator to victim and societal protection, prioritizing the safety of law-abiding people over the freedom of movement for dangerous individuals.