Fatal Swedish bus incident was not deliberate: police

Firefighters spray water at the scene of the accident after a bus crashed into a bus stop in Östermalm in Stockholm, Sweden. (AP)
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Updated 15 November 2025
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Fatal Swedish bus incident was not deliberate: police

  • The vehicle plowed into a queue at a bus stop during afternoon rush hour on Friday, killing three people and injuring three others

STOCKHOLM: Swedish police said on Saturday they believed a fatal incident in which a bus rammed into a queue of people in Stockholm the previous day was an accident.
The vehicle plowed into a queue at a bus stop during afternoon rush hour on Friday, killing three people and injuring three others.
“There is no evidence from the material we have analyzed so far — including witness statements and photos — that the incident was intentional,” police spokesman Ola Osterling told AFP.
The driver, who had initially been arrested on suspicion of manslaughter, was in hospital, Osterling said.
Neither the driver nor the victims have been named.


Mexican ships carrying humanitarian aid enter Havana Harbor

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Mexican ships carrying humanitarian aid enter Havana Harbor

  • Mexico sends aid amid US pressure on ‌Cuba oil supply
  • Mexican President Sheinbaum pledges more aid shipments to Cuba
HAVANA: Two Mexican-flagged ships loaded with humanitarian aid entered Havana Harbor early on Thursday, a Reuters witness said, as Cuba’s long-time ally made good on a promise to assist after Washington threatened tariffs on countries that send oil to Cuba. One of the ships, the ‌Papaloapan, carried large ‌quantities of white-wrapped pallets on its ​deck ‌as ⁠it ​passed beside ⁠the El Morro castle before entering the quiet waters of the harbor. The shipment from Mexico arrives just days after the island’s communist-run government announced increasingly strict rationing measures to confront US efforts to cut off Cuba’s fuel supply. Washington in January threatened tariffs on countries that supply oil ⁠to the island, saying that Cuba poses ‌an “extraordinary threat” to US national ‌security — a claim Havana denies. Mexico announced ​the aid delivery after ‌halting shipments of crude and refined products to Cuba in ‌mid-January under pressure from the Trump administration.
“These ships set sail from the port of Veracruz with a cargo of more than 814 tons of supplies destined for the civilian population of ‌the island of Cuba,” Mexico`s government said in a statement later in the day.
The cargo ⁠included liquid ⁠and powdered milk, meat products, cookies, beans, rice, tuna in water, sardines and vegetable oil, as well as personal hygiene items, the statement said. Ediberto Rodriguez, a 65-year-old Havana resident and state worker, watched the ships enter the harbor and praised Mexico for what he called an “unforgettable gesture.” “Mexico hasn’t abandoned us,” he said. “Even with pressure from a global superpower (the United States), they weren’t afraid.” Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said on Wednesday that her government will send ​a second shipment of ​humanitarian aid to Cuba in the coming days.