Sweden Hakuna cha Lockdown wala Barakoa: Lakini Hamna Hata Mmoja Anaye Wanyoshea Kidole

Sweden Hakuna cha Lockdown wala Barakoa: Lakini Hamna Hata Mmoja Anaye Wanyoshea Kidole

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Siyo WHO wala vyombo vya habari vya kimagharibi ambavyo vinawanyooshea kidole Sweden kwa hatua yake ya kupambana na uviko-19. Sweden imeamua kuto funga nchi, pia kutoshurutisha watu wake kuvaa barakoa. Lakini ajabu ya mtende siyo Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus wala BBC ambaye hata amediriki kutaja kuhusu hatua inayochukuliwa na Sweden kuwa ni hatari kwa usalama wa afya ya dunia. Hiyo ni tofauti kabisa na Tanzania ilivyokuwa ikinangwa na hawa Mabeberu (mimi nitaendelea kuwaita hivyo tu, hususan pale wanapoonekana kuingilia maslahi yetu kwa faida yao) waliokuwa wakihubiri kote kote kuwa Tanzania ni kitovu cha ugonjwa huo.​

No-lockdown Sweden broke with most of the world and didn't require face masks. Those who wear them say they're treated with suspicion and abuse.​


Sinéad Baker
Sat, June 5, 2021, 12:15 PM


Sweden coronavirus

Commuters at a train station in Stockholm, Sweden. The country has no mask mandate. Jonas Gratzer/Getty Images
  • Sweden, which has taken a unique approach to the pandemic, doesn't have a mask mandate.
  • Those who wear face masks tell Insider they are scared or face abuse in public.
  • One person said: "I have had people cough on me or mimic coughing on more occasions than I can count."
  • See more stories on Insider's business page.
Andreia Rodrigues left Sweden because of its COVID-19 response.
Rodrigues, who had been living in Sweden for more than four years, decided to return to her native Portugal in March, saying she felt unsafe living in a country where the government had no rules about mask wearing, and where she faced abuse when she did wear one.
"I couldn't take it in Sweden anymore," she told Insider.
She said her fiancé feared for her safety when she went outside in a mask.

"I have had people laugh and point at me, people screaming, 'You should lock yourself at home if you are so scared of corona,' people coughing in my direction and then laughing and saying: 'Corona! Corona!'"
Sweden coronavirus

An outdoor restaurant in Stockholm on March 26, 2020. TT News Agency/Janerik Henriksson via REUTERS
Sweden's health ministry doesn't recommend mask wearing as a preventative measure against the coronavirus.
The strategy contrasts with most other countries, where mask wearing in indoor settings often remained a rule even as governments were recording low case numbers.
Governments and scientists in places like the UK have said masks will likely be the last rule to change in their countries as they reopen.
And while Sweden's government tweaked its recommendations in January to ask that people wear masks in very specific circumstances, most of the country still doesn't do it, leaving those who do feeling ostracized and unsafe.

Sweden has long pursued a different strategy​

Sweden has taken a unique approach to the pandemic. As other nations implemented lockdowns, Sweden had few rules, focusing instead on social distancing.
Its death toll rose much higher than the countries beside it, despite having similar population demographics.
However, that death toll has stayed lower than many other European countries that were overwhelmed by the virus.
Experts pointed to unique aspects of Swedish life as reasons for this, including the high volume of people that live alone and population's high trust in the government, which suggests people are likely to follow recommendations even without their becoming formal rules.
Still, the country's leaders say there were mistakes: In December, Sweden's prime minister said some errors were made, and the king called the coronavirus strategy "a failure."
Anders Tegnell, Sweden's chief epidemiologist, also said last June that, with hindsight, more measures were needed.
Some residents now say they fear Sweden is making similar mistakes with its mask strategy.
Sweden coronavirus

People take the train in Stockholm on March 1, 2021. Jonas Gratzer/Getty Images

'They would glare at me ... yell at me, cough at me'

Jennifer Luetz, who is originally from Germany, lives in Norrköping, near Stockholm. She told Insider people "stared at me like I was an alien" when she started wearing a mask last February.
Luetz said she is in an at-risk group, and is afraid to stop wearing a one.
She said she "got used to the staring."
But she said "what was horrid, though, was the catcalls and the nasty comments, people laughing at you openly in the stores." She also said she received xenophobic comments for wearing a mask.
Others, who said they wore masks to feel safer, described similar reactions.
One woman, who asked not to be named as she said it could put her husband's job at risk, told Insider she got funny looks when she started wearing a mask in March 2020. Her identity is known to Insider.
"As months passed, people became more aggressive. They would glare at me in anger, yell at me, cough at me. It was ridiculous and made me very angry," she said.
Keith Begg, who lives in a Stockholm suburb and campaigns for stricter coronavirus rules, said he has faced "ongoing" abuse for wearing a mask since April 2020.
He said it's less rare now, but there were many incidents: "Once I had my mask ripped off by a bunch of teenagers who ran away. I have had people cough on me or mimic coughing on more occasions than I can count," he said.
"You still become a little bit conscious of wearing a mask in Sweden because it is still not normalized."
Sweden coronavirus

A commuter waits for a bus on January 7, 2021, in Sweden. JONATHAN NACKSTRAND/AFP via Getty Images
Another woman in Stockholm, who asked not to be named as she feared repercussions from work, said she gets accusing looks from people when wearing a mask, and her children were made fun of in school for wearing them.

Masks are barely recommended

Sweden's public health agency emphasizes many of the steps other countries do: Social distancing, working from home, washing your hands, getting vaccinated.
But masks are a notable absence.
The "how to protect yourself" section on the agency's website does not mention face coverings. Nor does its list of recommendations for reducing the spread.
In January, ten months after a pandemic was declared, the agency added a recommendation - not a rule - that adults wear face masks on public transport.
And it's only for rush hours: between 7 a.m. and 9 a.m., and 4 p.m. and 6 p.m, and only when they can't distance themselves from other people.
Most countries battling the virus have required masks indoors, and some European countries, like Belgium and France, have mandated wearing them outdoors.
Israel, which has the highest proportion of its population fully vaccinated, only has one restriction still in place: masks in closed public spaces.
The World Health Organization also recommends that fully vaccinated people continue to wear masks.
Anders Tegnell

State epidemiologist Anders Tegnell of the Public Health Agency of Sweden on May 20, 2021. CLAUDIO BRESCIANI/TT News Agency/AFP via Getty Images
But here's how Sweden has justified its alternative approach: Both Tegnell, the state epidemiologist, and Johan Carlson, head of the public health agency, have said that mask wearing could lead to people ignoring other recommendations like social distancing.

Swedes don't often have to wear masks

Insider also spoke to people in Sweden who say they only wear masks in line with government guidance.
Mazdak Dorosti, who works in banking in Stockholm, said he has worn a mask twice: at an Apple store and the dentist. He said staff gave him a mask both times.
"I see people wearing masks in the metro and shopping malls, but the majority of people don't wear a mask," he said.
He said the government's not recommending masks meant "wearing a mask sent two conflicting messages, either the person was sick or the person was little paranoid." He suggested that it means people who wanted to wear masks didn't.
Sweden coronavirus

A resident at a nursing home in Gothenburg gets a coronavirus vaccine on January 7, 2021. Fredrik Lerneryd/Getty Images
Katarina Eckerberg said she and her family "wear masks in public places such as supermarkets, public transport, shopping centers, but not otherwise."
"It is not obligatory but recommended and maybe half do, half don't," she said.
Cathy Xiao Chen, who helps lead a coworking space in Uppsala, told Insider: "I wear a mask while taking public transport. Some people do, many people don't."
"People continue to invade each other's personal space and ignore social-distancing recommendations," he said.

'I feel like I am on another planet'

Sweden's new mask recommendations appear to have had different effects around the country, but mask-wearers still aren't at ease.
Dorosti, who lives in Stockholm, said: "People felt more comfortable in wearing a mask, without getting the judgmental looks."
Meanwhile Begg, who lives in the city's suburbs, said: "From my observations, I would say between 15 to 20% wear them on public transport." He said he thinks less than 5% of people wear masks in the supermarket.
"The lack of awareness in Stockholm is quite astounding and would be quite difficult to comprehend for many Europeans where the mask has become an essential accessory," he said.
Luetz said that the lack of masks means that "sometimes I feel like I am on another planet."
Rodrigues, who left Sweden in March, said she "started seeing a very slight increase in the amount of people wearing masks" before she moved.
But she said going back to Portugal has proven just how different Sweden was.
"I think back at the time I spent there, being surrounded by hundreds of maskless people at the supermarket for example, and it feels unreal, like a previous life."
Read the original article on Business Insider
 
Habari zenu ndugu wana jf!

Nipende kuwakaribisha kwenye hii fursa adimu ya kujikwamua kiuchumi.
Crowd rising ni system ya kujipatia kipato kwa njia ya network (Network marketing) . Fursa hii imeanzia nchini Canada ikiwa na lengo hilo hilo la kuwakwamua watu kiuchumi ,baada ya kupata mafinikio makubwa imeweza nchi mbalimbali na kuleta mabadiliko chanya.
Bado hujachelewa unachotakiwa kufanya ni kutafuta shilingi elfu 20( Tsh 20000) uweze kujapatia official account. Kwa maelezo zaidi karibu Pm Asante.

NB:
*Failures wa maisha hamna nafasi katika uzi huu piteni kando

*Moderator msifute uzi huu
]

Mbona haihusianai na mada. Si ungefungua uzi wako kuhusu tangazo lako?
 
Muwe mnafanya hata kautafiti kidogo kabla ya kuandika kitu ambacho hakiko accurate.


Mnavyofanya kautafiti muwe mnaangalia na TAREHE ZA NYARAKA MNAZOTUMIA. HUO WARAKA NI MIEZI SITA ILIYOPITA.
NA HABARI NILIYOWALETEA NI YA LEO HII TAREHE 5, MWEZI JUNI, 2021. MWANZO MWA MAJIRA YA KIANGAZI.
AKSANTE.
 
Kwani COVID ilianza lini hadi article ya miezi sita iwe irrelevant leo hii? 😳😳😳
Mnavyofanya kautafiti muwe mnaangalia na TAREHE ZA NYARAKA MNAZOTUMIA. HUO WARAKA NI MIEZI SITA ILIYOPITA.
NA HABARI NILIYOWALETEA NI YA LEO HII TAREHE 5, MWEZI JUNI, 2021. MWANZO MWA MAJIRA YA KIANGAZI.
AKSANTE.
 
In the programme, the king says: "I think we have failed. We have a large number who have died and that is terrible.
"The people of Sweden have suffered tremendously in difficult conditions. One thinks of all the family members who have happened to be unable to say goodbye to their deceased family members. I think it is a tough and traumatic experience not to be able to say a warm goodbye."

When asked if he was afraid of being infected with Covid-19, the king - who is 74 - said: "Lately, it has felt more obvious, it has crept closer and closer. That's not what you want."
 
Kwani COVID ilianza lini hadi article ya miezi sita iwe irrelevant leo hii? 😳😳😳

Covid is like chameleon. It's always keep on changing. That's why we have a series of strands. & individual Covid status is also not uniform. A person can test +ve today and in two weeks can test otherwise. It's not like HIV, when you are +ve, the result will never change (lazima utakuwa unaikumbuka, maana ilitunyanyasa sana miaka ya 90).
 
The subject was lockdown in Sweden that in Sweden there was no lockdown to fight against COVID, which is not true.
Covid is like chameleon. It's always keep on changing. That's why we have a series of strands. & individual Covid status is also not uniform. A person can test +ve today and in two weeks can test otherwise. It's not like HIV, when you are +ve, the result will never change (lazima utakuwa unaikumbuka, maana ilitunyanyasa sana miaka ya 90).
 
'DAMU YA KUNGUNI".
cha ajabu magufuli kufariki Tu.
Na vifo na wagonjwa wa Corona wamepotea[emoji16][emoji16].
 
Mnavyofanya kautafiti muwe mnaangalia na TAREHE ZA NYARAKA MNAZOTUMIA. HUO WARAKA NI MIEZI SITA ILIYOPITA.
NA HABARI NILIYOWALETEA NI YA LEO HII TAREHE 5, MWEZI JUNI, 2021. MWANZO MWA MAJIRA YA KIANGAZI.
AKSANTE.

Muwe mnakumbuka kupigia mistari kuwa Sweden watu wanapewa chanjo ya Corona na kama mafanikio ya chanjo, mabarakoa si ya muhimu tena.
 
Kwa taarifa yako lockdown imepigwa mwaka na nusu huko mpk bar kuingia Mwisho sa 2 usiku baada ya hapo ni kwenu.nenda ukalale.
Wazee wote washapigwa chanjo
Migahawa imefunguliwa
Kuna siku polisi alinihudumia kinywaji, ikawa "unataka nini ?
"Namwambia nigee hiyo "😂😂😂
Kapima kanipa kiroho safi tu kumbe mpango wao wanafunga hiyo bar "
 

Siyo WHO wala vyombo vya habari vya kimagharibi ambavyo vinawanyooshea kidole Sweden kwa hatua yake ya kupambana na uviko-19. Sweden imeamua kuto funga nchi, pia kutoshurutisha watu wake kuvaa barakoa. Lakini ajabu ya mtende siyo Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus wala BBC ambaye hata amediriki kutaja kuhusu hatua inayochukuliwa na Sweden kuwa ni hatari kwa usalama wa afya ya dunia. Hiyo ni tofauti kabisa na Tanzania ilivyokuwa ikinangwa na hawa Mabeberu (mimi nitaendelea kuwaita hivyo tu, hususan pale wanapoonekana kuingilia maslahi yetu kwa faida yao) waliokuwa wakihubiri kote kote kuwa Tanzania ni kitovu cha ugonjwa huo.​

No-lockdown Sweden broke with most of the world and didn't require face masks. Those who wear them say they're treated with suspicion and abuse.​


Sinéad Baker
Sat, June 5, 2021, 12:15 PM


Sweden coronavirus

Commuters at a train station in Stockholm, Sweden. The country has no mask mandate. Jonas Gratzer/Getty Images
  • Sweden, which has taken a unique approach to the pandemic, doesn't have a mask mandate.
  • Those who wear face masks tell Insider they are scared or face abuse in public.
  • One person said: "I have had people cough on me or mimic coughing on more occasions than I can count."
  • See more stories on Insider's business page.
Andreia Rodrigues left Sweden because of its COVID-19 response.
Rodrigues, who had been living in Sweden for more than four years, decided to return to her native Portugal in March, saying she felt unsafe living in a country where the government had no rules about mask wearing, and where she faced abuse when she did wear one.
"I couldn't take it in Sweden anymore," she told Insider.
She said her fiancé feared for her safety when she went outside in a mask.

"I have had people laugh and point at me, people screaming, 'You should lock yourself at home if you are so scared of corona,' people coughing in my direction and then laughing and saying: 'Corona! Corona!'"
Sweden coronavirus

An outdoor restaurant in Stockholm on March 26, 2020. TT News Agency/Janerik Henriksson via REUTERS
Sweden's health ministry doesn't recommend mask wearing as a preventative measure against the coronavirus.
The strategy contrasts with most other countries, where mask wearing in indoor settings often remained a rule even as governments were recording low case numbers.
Governments and scientists in places like the UK have said masks will likely be the last rule to change in their countries as they reopen.
And while Sweden's government tweaked its recommendations in January to ask that people wear masks in very specific circumstances, most of the country still doesn't do it, leaving those who do feeling ostracized and unsafe.

Sweden has long pursued a different strategy​

Sweden has taken a unique approach to the pandemic. As other nations implemented lockdowns, Sweden had few rules, focusing instead on social distancing.
Its death toll rose much higher than the countries beside it, despite having similar population demographics.
However, that death toll has stayed lower than many other European countries that were overwhelmed by the virus.
Experts pointed to unique aspects of Swedish life as reasons for this, including the high volume of people that live alone and population's high trust in the government, which suggests people are likely to follow recommendations even without their becoming formal rules.
Still, the country's leaders say there were mistakes: In December, Sweden's prime minister said some errors were made, and the king called the coronavirus strategy "a failure."
Anders Tegnell, Sweden's chief epidemiologist, also said last June that, with hindsight, more measures were needed.
Some residents now say they fear Sweden is making similar mistakes with its mask strategy.
Sweden coronavirus

People take the train in Stockholm on March 1, 2021. Jonas Gratzer/Getty Images

'They would glare at me ... yell at me, cough at me'

Jennifer Luetz, who is originally from Germany, lives in Norrköping, near Stockholm. She told Insider people "stared at me like I was an alien" when she started wearing a mask last February.
Luetz said she is in an at-risk group, and is afraid to stop wearing a one.
She said she "got used to the staring."
But she said "what was horrid, though, was the catcalls and the nasty comments, people laughing at you openly in the stores." She also said she received xenophobic comments for wearing a mask.
Others, who said they wore masks to feel safer, described similar reactions.
One woman, who asked not to be named as she said it could put her husband's job at risk, told Insider she got funny looks when she started wearing a mask in March 2020. Her identity is known to Insider.
"As months passed, people became more aggressive. They would glare at me in anger, yell at me, cough at me. It was ridiculous and made me very angry," she said.
Keith Begg, who lives in a Stockholm suburb and campaigns for stricter coronavirus rules, said he has faced "ongoing" abuse for wearing a mask since April 2020.
He said it's less rare now, but there were many incidents: "Once I had my mask ripped off by a bunch of teenagers who ran away. I have had people cough on me or mimic coughing on more occasions than I can count," he said.
"You still become a little bit conscious of wearing a mask in Sweden because it is still not normalized."
Sweden coronavirus

A commuter waits for a bus on January 7, 2021, in Sweden. JONATHAN NACKSTRAND/AFP via Getty Images
Another woman in Stockholm, who asked not to be named as she feared repercussions from work, said she gets accusing looks from people when wearing a mask, and her children were made fun of in school for wearing them.

Masks are barely recommended

Sweden's public health agency emphasizes many of the steps other countries do: Social distancing, working from home, washing your hands, getting vaccinated.
But masks are a notable absence.
The "how to protect yourself" section on the agency's website does not mention face coverings. Nor does its list of recommendations for reducing the spread.
In January, ten months after a pandemic was declared, the agency added a recommendation - not a rule - that adults wear face masks on public transport.
And it's only for rush hours: between 7 a.m. and 9 a.m., and 4 p.m. and 6 p.m, and only when they can't distance themselves from other people.
Most countries battling the virus have required masks indoors, and some European countries, like Belgium and France, have mandated wearing them outdoors.
Israel, which has the highest proportion of its population fully vaccinated, only has one restriction still in place: masks in closed public spaces.
The World Health Organization also recommends that fully vaccinated people continue to wear masks.
Anders Tegnell

State epidemiologist Anders Tegnell of the Public Health Agency of Sweden on May 20, 2021. CLAUDIO BRESCIANI/TT News Agency/AFP via Getty Images
But here's how Sweden has justified its alternative approach: Both Tegnell, the state epidemiologist, and Johan Carlson, head of the public health agency, have said that mask wearing could lead to people ignoring other recommendations like social distancing.

Swedes don't often have to wear masks

Insider also spoke to people in Sweden who say they only wear masks in line with government guidance.
Mazdak Dorosti, who works in banking in Stockholm, said he has worn a mask twice: at an Apple store and the dentist. He said staff gave him a mask both times.
"I see people wearing masks in the metro and shopping malls, but the majority of people don't wear a mask," he said.
He said the government's not recommending masks meant "wearing a mask sent two conflicting messages, either the person was sick or the person was little paranoid." He suggested that it means people who wanted to wear masks didn't.
Sweden coronavirus

A resident at a nursing home in Gothenburg gets a coronavirus vaccine on January 7, 2021. Fredrik Lerneryd/Getty Images
Katarina Eckerberg said she and her family "wear masks in public places such as supermarkets, public transport, shopping centers, but not otherwise."
"It is not obligatory but recommended and maybe half do, half don't," she said.
Cathy Xiao Chen, who helps lead a coworking space in Uppsala, told Insider: "I wear a mask while taking public transport. Some people do, many people don't."
"People continue to invade each other's personal space and ignore social-distancing recommendations," he said.

'I feel like I am on another planet'

Sweden's new mask recommendations appear to have had different effects around the country, but mask-wearers still aren't at ease.
Dorosti, who lives in Stockholm, said: "People felt more comfortable in wearing a mask, without getting the judgmental looks."
Meanwhile Begg, who lives in the city's suburbs, said: "From my observations, I would say between 15 to 20% wear them on public transport." He said he thinks less than 5% of people wear masks in the supermarket.
"The lack of awareness in Stockholm is quite astounding and would be quite difficult to comprehend for many Europeans where the mask has become an essential accessory," he said.
Luetz said that the lack of masks means that "sometimes I feel like I am on another planet."
Rodrigues, who left Sweden in March, said she "started seeing a very slight increase in the amount of people wearing masks" before she moved.
But she said going back to Portugal has proven just how different Sweden was.
"I think back at the time I spent there, being surrounded by hundreds of maskless people at the supermarket for example, and it feels unreal, like a previous life."
Read the original article on Business Insider
Kama wao ndo wachangiaji wakubwa wa sekta yako ya afya lazima wakupangie
 

Siyo WHO wala vyombo vya habari vya kimagharibi ambavyo vinawanyooshea kidole Sweden kwa hatua yake ya kupambana na uviko-19. Sweden imeamua kuto funga nchi, pia kutoshurutisha watu wake kuvaa barakoa. Lakini ajabu ya mtende siyo Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus wala BBC ambaye hata amediriki kutaja kuhusu hatua inayochukuliwa na Sweden kuwa ni hatari kwa usalama wa afya ya dunia. Hiyo ni tofauti kabisa na Tanzania ilivyokuwa ikinangwa na hawa Mabeberu (mimi nitaendelea kuwaita hivyo tu, hususan pale wanapoonekana kuingilia maslahi yetu kwa faida yao) waliokuwa wakihubiri kote kote kuwa Tanzania ni kitovu cha ugonjwa huo.​

No-lockdown Sweden broke with most of the world and didn't require face masks. Those who wear them say they're treated with suspicion and abuse.​


Sinéad Baker
Sat, June 5, 2021, 12:15 PM


Sweden coronavirus

Commuters at a train station in Stockholm, Sweden. The country has no mask mandate. Jonas Gratzer/Getty Images
  • Sweden, which has taken a unique approach to the pandemic, doesn't have a mask mandate.
  • Those who wear face masks tell Insider they are scared or face abuse in public.
  • One person said: "I have had people cough on me or mimic coughing on more occasions than I can count."
  • See more stories on Insider's business page.
Andreia Rodrigues left Sweden because of its COVID-19 response.
Rodrigues, who had been living in Sweden for more than four years, decided to return to her native Portugal in March, saying she felt unsafe living in a country where the government had no rules about mask wearing, and where she faced abuse when she did wear one.
"I couldn't take it in Sweden anymore," she told Insider.
She said her fiancé feared for her safety when she went outside in a mask.

"I have had people laugh and point at me, people screaming, 'You should lock yourself at home if you are so scared of corona,' people coughing in my direction and then laughing and saying: 'Corona! Corona!'"
Sweden coronavirus

An outdoor restaurant in Stockholm on March 26, 2020. TT News Agency/Janerik Henriksson via REUTERS
Sweden's health ministry doesn't recommend mask wearing as a preventative measure against the coronavirus.
The strategy contrasts with most other countries, where mask wearing in indoor settings often remained a rule even as governments were recording low case numbers.
Governments and scientists in places like the UK have said masks will likely be the last rule to change in their countries as they reopen.
And while Sweden's government tweaked its recommendations in January to ask that people wear masks in very specific circumstances, most of the country still doesn't do it, leaving those who do feeling ostracized and unsafe.

Sweden has long pursued a different strategy​

Sweden has taken a unique approach to the pandemic. As other nations implemented lockdowns, Sweden had few rules, focusing instead on social distancing.
Its death toll rose much higher than the countries beside it, despite having similar population demographics.
However, that death toll has stayed lower than many other European countries that were overwhelmed by the virus.
Experts pointed to unique aspects of Swedish life as reasons for this, including the high volume of people that live alone and population's high trust in the government, which suggests people are likely to follow recommendations even without their becoming formal rules.
Still, the country's leaders say there were mistakes: In December, Sweden's prime minister said some errors were made, and the king called the coronavirus strategy "a failure."
Anders Tegnell, Sweden's chief epidemiologist, also said last June that, with hindsight, more measures were needed.
Some residents now say they fear Sweden is making similar mistakes with its mask strategy.
Sweden coronavirus

People take the train in Stockholm on March 1, 2021. Jonas Gratzer/Getty Images

'They would glare at me ... yell at me, cough at me'

Jennifer Luetz, who is originally from Germany, lives in Norrköping, near Stockholm. She told Insider people "stared at me like I was an alien" when she started wearing a mask last February.
Luetz said she is in an at-risk group, and is afraid to stop wearing a one.
She said she "got used to the staring."
But she said "what was horrid, though, was the catcalls and the nasty comments, people laughing at you openly in the stores." She also said she received xenophobic comments for wearing a mask.
Others, who said they wore masks to feel safer, described similar reactions.
One woman, who asked not to be named as she said it could put her husband's job at risk, told Insider she got funny looks when she started wearing a mask in March 2020. Her identity is known to Insider.
"As months passed, people became more aggressive. They would glare at me in anger, yell at me, cough at me. It was ridiculous and made me very angry," she said.
Keith Begg, who lives in a Stockholm suburb and campaigns for stricter coronavirus rules, said he has faced "ongoing" abuse for wearing a mask since April 2020.
He said it's less rare now, but there were many incidents: "Once I had my mask ripped off by a bunch of teenagers who ran away. I have had people cough on me or mimic coughing on more occasions than I can count," he said.
"You still become a little bit conscious of wearing a mask in Sweden because it is still not normalized."
Sweden coronavirus

A commuter waits for a bus on January 7, 2021, in Sweden. JONATHAN NACKSTRAND/AFP via Getty Images
Another woman in Stockholm, who asked not to be named as she feared repercussions from work, said she gets accusing looks from people when wearing a mask, and her children were made fun of in school for wearing them.

Masks are barely recommended

Sweden's public health agency emphasizes many of the steps other countries do: Social distancing, working from home, washing your hands, getting vaccinated.
But masks are a notable absence.
The "how to protect yourself" section on the agency's website does not mention face coverings. Nor does its list of recommendations for reducing the spread.
In January, ten months after a pandemic was declared, the agency added a recommendation - not a rule - that adults wear face masks on public transport.
And it's only for rush hours: between 7 a.m. and 9 a.m., and 4 p.m. and 6 p.m, and only when they can't distance themselves from other people.
Most countries battling the virus have required masks indoors, and some European countries, like Belgium and France, have mandated wearing them outdoors.
Israel, which has the highest proportion of its population fully vaccinated, only has one restriction still in place: masks in closed public spaces.
The World Health Organization also recommends that fully vaccinated people continue to wear masks.
Anders Tegnell

State epidemiologist Anders Tegnell of the Public Health Agency of Sweden on May 20, 2021. CLAUDIO BRESCIANI/TT News Agency/AFP via Getty Images
But here's how Sweden has justified its alternative approach: Both Tegnell, the state epidemiologist, and Johan Carlson, head of the public health agency, have said that mask wearing could lead to people ignoring other recommendations like social distancing.

Swedes don't often have to wear masks

Insider also spoke to people in Sweden who say they only wear masks in line with government guidance.
Mazdak Dorosti, who works in banking in Stockholm, said he has worn a mask twice: at an Apple store and the dentist. He said staff gave him a mask both times.
"I see people wearing masks in the metro and shopping malls, but the majority of people don't wear a mask," he said.
He said the government's not recommending masks meant "wearing a mask sent two conflicting messages, either the person was sick or the person was little paranoid." He suggested that it means people who wanted to wear masks didn't.
Sweden coronavirus

A resident at a nursing home in Gothenburg gets a coronavirus vaccine on January 7, 2021. Fredrik Lerneryd/Getty Images
Katarina Eckerberg said she and her family "wear masks in public places such as supermarkets, public transport, shopping centers, but not otherwise."
"It is not obligatory but recommended and maybe half do, half don't," she said.
Cathy Xiao Chen, who helps lead a coworking space in Uppsala, told Insider: "I wear a mask while taking public transport. Some people do, many people don't."
"People continue to invade each other's personal space and ignore social-distancing recommendations," he said.

'I feel like I am on another planet'

Sweden's new mask recommendations appear to have had different effects around the country, but mask-wearers still aren't at ease.
Dorosti, who lives in Stockholm, said: "People felt more comfortable in wearing a mask, without getting the judgmental looks."
Meanwhile Begg, who lives in the city's suburbs, said: "From my observations, I would say between 15 to 20% wear them on public transport." He said he thinks less than 5% of people wear masks in the supermarket.
"The lack of awareness in Stockholm is quite astounding and would be quite difficult to comprehend for many Europeans where the mask has become an essential accessory," he said.
Luetz said that the lack of masks means that "sometimes I feel like I am on another planet."
Rodrigues, who left Sweden in March, said she "started seeing a very slight increase in the amount of people wearing masks" before she moved.
But she said going back to Portugal has proven just how different Sweden was.
"I think back at the time I spent there, being surrounded by hundreds of maskless people at the supermarket for example, and it feels unreal, like a previous life."
Read the original article on Business Insider
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