When a fire threatened Ellinor Tandlund's farm in Pajala, she couldn't call emergency services at 112 due to no mobile coverage. This highlights the dangers faced by rural residents in an otherwise digitally advanced Sweden. Politician Tandlund warns that the country's digital transition comes at the expense of remote areas.
Ellinor Tandlund, a municipal politician for the Social Democrats in Pajala, recounts a terrifying incident when flames engulfed her family's farm. In panic, she tried to call 112, but there was no coverage at all on site. 'I screamed in panic – but 112 couldn't be reached', she writes in a debate article in Dagens Nyheter.
Sweden is ranked as one of the world's most digitized countries, but according to Tandlund, this involves an unfair distribution. The national shift to new technology benefits urban areas while leaving rural regions behind. 'Living in our parts is downright life-threatening', she emphasizes, pointing out how inadequate infrastructure endangers lives and property.
Tandlund's account illuminates a broader debate on regional disparities in Sweden. While cities enjoy fast connectivity, northern countryside struggles with basic services like emergency calls. She calls for actions to ensure coverage across the entire country, so no one is left in peril during crises.