Sweden Admits it's Lost Control of its Own Borders
Scandinavian nation cannot stem the flood of migrants into the country

The head of Sweden's National Border Police has admitted that the country has lost control of its own borders and doesn't have the resources to control the influx of mass migration.
Patrik Engström has warned that his force doesn't have the ability to even enforce the low standard required by the European Union under its Schengen zone open borders agreement.
Engström, a former Europol top cop and Swedish police superintendent, made the warning when he revealed that the Border Police, that he commands, simply doesn't have enough resources to adequately patrol and secure all of the 102 border crossings and ports nationwide.
The Swedish authorities reportedly have a shortfall of 500 border officers to meet the numbers required to do the job adequately, but Engström declined to discuss specific figures, Sweden Radio reports.
Engström said: “…the border police’s mission is not resourced to meet Schengen’s requirements for border control…
"It is a work that is carried out in all seven regions of the police.
"What is needed, without entering the exact number, is more staff to be able to carry out the external border control that the EU requires.
"It is about being able to conduct control at both large and small border crossing points.”

Breitbart reports, the European Union’s Schengen zone is a collection of 26 states which engage in no border control between each other, but maintain external borders with other nations.
Sweden only had a border with one non-Schengen nation, Finland.
The officer’s comments come months after an explosive leaked European Union report lifted the lid on the extent of disarray in Sweden’s border control apparatus.
The paper, which it is alleged was hushed up in the run-up to the 2018 national elections in which immigration and border control were key issues for the electorate, claimed Sweden has the worst border control of any nation in the Schengen zone, and that “there is no actual border control.”
Faults including border agents receiving only very basic training, not being told how to spot forged documents, and not checking for jihadist fighters travelling to the nation were highlighted in the document.

Engström’s remarks follow others he made about the document in October when he said “It is of course extremely worrying and serious that we do not meet the Schengen requirements.
"But the focus for us is of course quite clear. It is clear that Sweden should comply with all Schengen requirements for external border control.”
The officer said in an interview that he had narrowed the problems being faced by the country’s border police down to five main areas, and believed it would take around five years to fix.
The Schengen open borders zone is one of the most prized achievements of the European Union and a key milestone on its journey to becoming a superstate in its own right.
Yet the impact of this has been seriously undermined since 2016 when several member states unilaterally suspended their open borders in reaction to the migrant crisis.
In 2019, five EU nations are still maintaining these restrictions, including Sweden and Germany.