Sweden’s Deep-State Migration Crisis: Clan Power, Corruption and Government Denial
Sweden’s rulers surrendered their migration system to foreign networks and hoped no one would notice. When a nation’s institutions fall, they fall from within. Sweden is the proof.
For years, Sweden’s political and media elites lectured the world about morality, migration and “open societies.” All the while, they were quietly handing one of the nation’s most powerful institutions over to clan networks, foreign loyalties and radical ideologues. Today, insiders reveal a captured Migration Agency operating like a globalist outpost—unaccountable, deeply corrupted and completely disconnected from the Swedish people it is supposed to serve. This is not a policy failure. It is the predictable result of a ruling class that placed ideology above sovereignty, loyalty and national security. Sweden’s migration scandal is more than a warning. It is a blueprint for how a Western nation unravels when its own elites stop defending it.
For many years, I have been contacted by individuals inside Sweden’s migration system who no longer recognize the country they once served. Some of them spent decades inside the bureaucracy, witnessing its transformation from a civil service authority into what several insiders now describe as a clan-captured institution, one where foreign loyalties, internal intimidation and ideological agendas outweigh both Swedish law and Swedish interests.
In May 2023, I was approached by one such whistleblower. He had worked across several Swedish agencies for twenty-five years, primarily within the Migration Agency. His first words to me were blunt: political correctness had existed inside the institution long before the public realized it. He recounted how a full year of legal work to deport Kosovo Albanians without asylum grounds had been erased overnight when a senior politician granted them amnesty, rewarding those who had simply remained hidden. Now, he wanted to reveal something far worse: Sweden systematically failed to revoke residence permits obtained on false grounds, even when clear evidence proved the individuals had no need for protection.
He told me how, in the early 2000s, Iraqis who had just received permanent residency under claims of danger immediately booked flights back to Iraq. Police at the border observed this pattern and sent more than four hundred reports to the Migration Agency, documenting that these individuals clearly lacked protection needs. When the whistleblower asked his superior how they would handle these cases, he was told: “Use the paper shredder.” Those cases were never processed. They were simply allowed to expire. According to him, and to others still inside the system, the situation has only deteriorated since.
In 2021, a case officer at the Migration Agency illegally granted sixty-seven residence and work permits during his final days on the job. Many of the beneficiaries were Iraqis. Despite an ongoing investigation for serious misconduct, he was accepted into a police-training fast track and even worked as a police officer before the legal process caught up. This was far from an isolated failure. Multiple documented cases reveal employees selling residence permits, issuing fraudulent approvals, and granting decisions tied to clan or family networks. Meanwhile, political leadership insists the system remains robust. The Migration Minister, Johan Forssell, repeatedly claims that Sweden now has Europe’s toughest migration policy. Yet in 2025 alone, Sweden issued around ninety thousand new residence permits, the vast majority to non-European migrants. The numbers reveal the truth that rhetoric attempts to conceal.
This was far from an isolated failure. Multiple documented cases reveal employees selling residence permits, issuing fraudulent approvals, and granting decisions tied to clan or family networks. Meanwhile, political leadership insists the system remains robust. Sweden’s Migration Minister Johan Forssell continues to claim that the country now has “Europe’s toughest migration policy.” Yet the reality tells a different story: in 2025 alone, Sweden issued around 90,000 new residence permits, the vast majority to non-European migrants. The rhetoric of toughness collapses under the weight of the numbers.
Between January 5 and 14 in 2026, the independent website Samnytt published a three-part investigative series based on extensive insider testimony. The picture they revealed was alarming even to those who had long followed migration policy. According to long-term employees, Swedes are now a minority inside the Migration Agency. Many employees do not have Swedish citizenship. Staff cluster by language group – Kurds with Kurds, Somalis with Somalis, Syrians with Syrians and Swedish staff often whisper behind closed doors for fear of repercussions. Foreign loyalties frequently outweigh loyalty to the Swedish state. Employees openly work to ensure residence permits for their own clan members. After Hamas’s October 7 attack, Muslim staff began wearing hijab in noticeably larger numbers, and colleagues reported hearing “From the river to the sea” sung in common areas.
A Jewish employee hid her Star of David under her clothing because she feared displaying it openly. Hijabs and crosses are acceptable on the premises, but a visible Jewish symbol is not. According to insiders, roughly a third of the staff are Muslims, many influenced by the worldview of the Muslim Brotherhood. Decision-making is heavily shaped by political bias. The prevailing internal narrative is that the current right-wing government is “the enemy.” Case officers choose approvals over rejections because approvals are faster and rarely appealed, while rejections almost always generate lengthy appeals. Around forty percent of rejected asylum claims cannot be enforced because countries such as Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Somalia and Eritrea refuse to take back their own citizens.
According to Samnytt, Alexis Karpoff, a legal expert who worked at the Migration Agency in the 1990s and later at the Aliens Appeals Board, confirms from the outside what insiders describe from within. He recounts employees moonlighting for asylum law firms, case officers pressured to deliver favorable outcomes, economic incentives to prolong cases, manipulation of country reports, and systematic acceptance of unverified documentation from particular regions. His conclusion is stark: “It’s not just corruption. It is serious criminality.”
When Sweden does issue a rejection, those who follow the rules and appear for scheduled meetings are usually deported. Those who evade authorities are effectively allowed to stay. Many disappear, change addresses, or hide within ethnic networks. Police rarely pursue them. Some individuals even commit crimes to avoid deportation, as certain countries refuse to take back offenders. The system punishes compliance and rewards defiance.
The insiders describe a bureaucracy that no longer serves the Swedish state but has instead become a self-perpetuating entity driven by ideology and protected by silence. “We cannot speak freely,” one employee said. “If you complain, you are removed from influence. This authority cannot be reformed. It must be dismantled entirely.”
For years, Sweden’s political and media elites presented the country as a moral superpower, immune to the chaos seen elsewhere.
But today:
· Sweden has Europe’s fastest-growing serious crime
· Clans control entire districts
· Migration bureaucracy has been captured from within
· Tens of thousands live in Sweden unlawfully (nobody really knows the actual numbers due to political unwillingness to investigate this)
· Swedish law no longer applies equally
Sweden has become a cautionary tale and a preview of what happens when ideology replaces governance.
As one insider said:
“This is a completely new system. A parallel state. And nobody dares stop it.”
This exposé is not simply about Sweden.
It is a warning to the entire Western world.


