The Swedish Grooming Scandal: How the State Sacrificed Elderly Women on the Altar of Multiculturalism and Fear of Being Called Racist
We are currently witnessing one of the greatest scandals in Sweden’s healthcare system. If hell exists, it's a Swedish institution where rapists are disguised as caregivers.
The last years, elderly women have being raped in unacceptable numbers within Sweden’s publicly funded elder care. This happens repeatedly, predictably, and with full institutional awareness, while authorities fragment responsibility and refuse to intervene at a national level. Municipalities hide behind procedures. Care providers cite staff shortages. The state invokes local autonomy. The outcome is always the same: elderly, helpless women are violated, robbed, and humiliated while the system remains intact, even as it absorbs a massive influx of foreign men totally unsuited for intimate care work.
What makes this abuse truly appalling is that it does not occur on society’s margins. It takes place at the very heart of the welfare state: in women’s own homes, in residential care facilities, in bathrooms, showers, and toilets. It happens when women are frail, cognitively impaired, wheelchair-bound, severely ill, or in the final stages of life, often entirely dependent on staff simply to survive. Escape is impossible. Their voices are weak or absent. And when the person assigned to provide care is the same person who violates them, society forfeits its dignity.
Imagine the final months of your life spent being raped and abused, unable to flee, unable to be heard, with no one coming to your rescue. If hell exists, it is not an abstract place. It is a Swedish care institution where rapists are disguised as caretakers, operating behind uniforms and procedures, while you are disabled, defenseless, and forgotten.
Since 2021, nearly 400 rapes of women over the age of 60 have been reported to Swedish police. In documented cases and court rulings, there is a notable overrepresentation of foreign-born perpetrators, a pattern authorities have been reluctant to address openly.
This figure alone should have triggered national emergency measures. Instead, it has been normalized as background noise in a system that has already failed. Professionals within elder care openly acknowledge that the dark figure is substantial, in some cases enormous, due to underreporting, cognitive impairment, fear, and institutional silence.
The pattern becomes clear when the cases are examined. Not as isolated events, but as connected outcomes of the same structure.
In Uppsala in 2023, an elderly woman known as Elsa, aged 84, repeatedly warned municipal authorities that a male home-care worker was exposing himself and behaving sexually in her home. No decisive action was taken. He was not removed. Months later, Elsa reported that the same man raped her. When the case eventually reached investigators, it was closed due to lack of evidence. A situation directly linked to the authorities’ failure to act when the warnings were first raised.
This case involved one alleged perpetrator. The following Uppsala case involved a different individual, but with the same institutional structure:
During 2023–2024, another home-care worker in Uppsala, in his mid-20s, raped and sexually assaulted at least four elderly women aged 77 to 88 in their own homes. He abused his position of trust and filmed parts of the assaults. He was ultimately sentenced to eight years in prison, but only after being allowed to continue working long enough to create multiple victims. Oversight failed repeatedly and at every level.
The institutional breakdown was so severe that in 2024, investigative reporting revealed multiple victims within the same municipal system, leading to the resignation of the entire elderly care committee in Uppsala. This was not the collapse caused by one individual, but by a system that granted access, ignored warnings, and protected itself before it protected vulnerable women.
In October 2025, in the Stockholm/Södertörn region, a 100-year-old woman was raped in her own home by a home-care worker in his late 30s, an Iraqi citizen, during a care visit. The court convicted him and sentenced him to four years in prison, declined to classify the crime as aggravated, and rejected deportation, despite prosecutorial requests. The same individual was acquitted in a separate rape allegation involving a 94-year-old woman, due to evidentiary limitations. One conviction. One acquittal. Two elderly women. Limited consequences.
In the Swedish province of Värmland in 2025, a man in his 40s was convicted of aggravated rape at a residential care facility and sentenced to six years in prison, an exception that only underscores how rare proportionate sentencing remains in cases involving elderly victims.
Then, in Vännäs, in the province of Västerbotten, December 2025, the system failed once more. An elderly woman living in a care facility was subjected to two separate sexual crimes by staff within four days. On December 23, her genital area was shaved against her will. On December 27, she was raped in the facility’s toilet. The suspects were removed from active duty but continued to receive full pay during the investigation. The woman reported that she no longer felt safe. The facility continued operating.
Different cities. Different years. Different perpetrators. But over and over again the same structure: Unsupervised access. Ignored warnings. Delayed reporting. Internal handling. Evidence lost. Victims left exposed. Perpetrators protected by procedure and by managers who downplay allegations, contain scandals, and allow individuals under credible suspicion to continue working with elderly women.
Oversight bodies have confirmed what these cases demonstrate: sexual abuse does occur within both home care and residential facilities, sometimes perpetrated by staff, and suspected crimes are frequently handled as administrative deviations rather than criminal acts. Language is softened. Responsibility is diluted. Urgency disappears.
When background data is examined, another uncomfortable pattern emerges: the most apalling one that authorities are reluctant to acknowledge publicly. A significant overrepresentation of foreign-born perpetrators appears in documented cases, often from cultures with fundamentally different views on women, sexuality, bodily autonomy, and consent. This is not speculation. It is documented. Avoiding the issue does not protect vulnerable women. It exposes them.
Meanwhile, Swedish elder care has increasingly been shaped by integration policy, labor shortages, and ideological denial. Low entry requirements, insufficient background checks, weak language standards, and known risks have been accepted year after year. Municipalities hire. Contractors supply. The state defines the framework and then looks away.
If children were subjected to abuse on this scale within publicly funded institutions, the country would come to a halt. Emergency legislation would follow. Ministers would resign. When elderly women are raped, the response is silence, relativization, and bureaucratic phrasing, as if their lives no longer carry the same weight as those of the younger citizens.
This is not a local problem. It is not a staffing issue. It is not complexity. It is a national betrayal. The crimes are documented. The pattern is established. The responsibility is clear.
And still, the system protects itself, while elderly women pay the price.
FORMAL DEMANDS — WHAT MUST HAPPEN NOW
This scandal requires immediate, national action. Not reviews, guidelines or symbolic gestures.
1. National Crisis Commission
A state-appointed, independent crisis commission with full mandate to investigate sexual abuse within elder care nationwide, including municipal failures, ignored warnings, non-reporting of crimes, and managerial accountability. This is a national emergency, not a local issue.
2. Mandatory Criminal Reporting by Law
Immediate legislative reform making police reporting mandatory for any suspected sexual offense or serious abuse within elder care. No discretion. No internal handling. Failure to report must carry legal consequences.
3. Mandatory and Recurring Background Checks
Legally enforced, recurring criminal background checks for all elder care staff, including those already employed. Immediate suspension without pay when credible allegations arise, pending investigation.
4. National Standards for Language and Competence
Statutory language and competency requirements for anyone granted intimate access to elderly residents. Inadequate communication is a safety risk and not a diversity issue.
5. State Responsibility and Sanctions
The state must assume direct responsibility for oversight and enforcement. Municipal autonomy cannot be used as a shield against accountability. Repeated failures must trigger sanctions, leadership removal, and loss of operating licenses.
Anything less is complicity.
Every day of inaction is another institutional choice. And it’s made at the expense of elderly women.



Excellent, Katerina!! Its really deplorable that we have to publish things like this to the world in order to get something done about it in Sweden!
The modern version of the senicide? Free to commit violent crimes against the elderly if you have an immigrant background! It is so bottomlessly spineless and vile that you are at a loss for words!