When SVT meets some young people in Brandkärr, who do not want to be seen by name or image, they tell about how good and beautiful the area is.

They believe that unrest and reporting on stone throwing has been magnified.

- There's not much to do, not much is happening here, says one.

Police ask about drugs

Do you mean it's okay to throw stones then?

- No no no. It is not OK. I mean it's just talked about here because it doesn't happen that much else. And then it enlarges.

Another in the company thinks they are being treated unfairly by the police. He tells of how he was stopped by the police on his way home from the shop and that the police asked if he had drugs on them or had ever tested drugs.

"They had never done that in town," he says and the others agree.

The police respond to the criticism

- One of our main tasks is to stop and check vehicles and people. It depends a little on the time and place, and then it can always be unpleasant if the police ask questions, says Nina Gual, municipal police in Nyköping.

But do you stop people in the city and ask if they have drugs, or do you do it only in Brandkärr?

- No, we do it everywhere. But it depends on time and place, if something has happened nearby or so. In general, we should not go around and ask things anyway, but sometimes we can stop a greater number of people to check the situation.