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Aftonbladet's attack on site that revealed Center party pedophilia: "They cross the border"
Published 5 June 2021 at 09.14
Aftonbladet goes today in a series of articles to furious attack on Stop the press - the news site that has made itself known for its revelations of pedophiles in the Center Party. The site is accused of "crossing the border", breaking the law and "threatening press freedom".
There are no flattering reviews when the Social Democratic evening newspaper this morning publishes no less than four articles in a row about the site Stop the press, which among other things revealed that Fredrick Federley's (C) partner is a convicted pedophile and that M-top Fredrik Reinfeldt's son Erik abuses cocaine.
In the spring, Stoppa pressarna published censored images from a sex film that acquitted former Chancellor of Justice Göran Lambertz of accusations of rape. The film is said to have contributed to the rape investigation against Lambertz being discontinued, but led to the current Chancellor of Justice Mari Heidenborg instead initiating an investigation against Stoppa pressarna for gross slander.
They "cross the border", writes Aftonbladet profile Martin Schori. "It's worrying", Caspar Opitz claims in another article - himself known for having, as editor-in-chief of DN, obscured the mass abuse of unaccompanied Afghans against Swedish teenage girls during the Stockholm festival "We are Sthlm" 2015.
Among other things, Aftonbladet informs readers that Stoppa pressarna rents a mailbox from the mailbox company Brevia and points out that the terrorist Rakhmat Akilov, several other jihadists, gang members and "rogue companies" also rented a mailbox from that particular company.
Aftonbladet demands that Stoppa pressarna joins the media ethics system, which is a body for the newspaper industry, and thus is subject to the supervision of its competitors and the established media giants. Otherwise, politicians may decide to restrict freedom of the press even more, warns the evening newspaper.
- "Should more media do as Stop the Press, there is a great risk that the legislature thinks that the self-regulatory system does not work - and perhaps enacts laws that restrict press freedom. It would be life-threatening," writes Martin Schori.
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