Swedish "justice" in full display.Her name is Meya Åberg. She was just 16 years old, walking home through a tunnel in Skellefteå after her shift at McDonald's on September 1, 2024. She missed the bus. Yazied Mohamed, an Eritrean refugee, stopped her and raped her.
He was convicted of rape by the Court of Appeal for Upper Norrland. Sentenced to a mere 3 years in prison and ordered to pay damages.
But prosecutors wanted him deported back to Eritrea after serving time. The court said no.
Why? Because, in their words, given the "nature and duration" of the offense, it was serious—but not "exceptionally serious" enough to warrant deportation under refugee protections. The assault "didn't last long enough." They noted it involved fingers, not pen*s, and was short-lived.
Meya's life is shattered. The rapist gets to stay in Sweden once his short sentence is done.
This is the system protecting the victim... or the perpetrator?
Facts don't lie. Sweden's own appeals court put it in writing.
