It was earlier this week that Rossana Dinamarca (V) wrote a chronicle in ttela with the headline "Does not participate in SVT's paja series at Kronogården". She had been invited to participate as a debater in SVT's new debate program Sweden meets, which premiered live from Trollhättan on Wednesday.

“I made it clear that I will not be in the debate. There will be no worthy debate that takes people's lives seriously. I will not participate as an alibi in such a pajamas series, ”she writes in the Chronicle.

Rossana Dinamarca writes as motivation in the chronicle that there is no satisfactory political balance between the debaters.

"Clear overweight right," she writes.

Creates more contradictions

Now further local votes are being raised against SVT's new debate program. Jorge Pereira and Robert Kozelka from the Integration Forum against racism have also refused to participate in the debate - albeit as an audience. They write that in a debate article in ttela today.

- We think, among other things, that this creates even more contradictions, says Jorge Pereira to SVT News West.

The debate program was originally broadcast from the Kronogården district of Trollhättan. The area has been debated in the media lately, including after the journalist and opinion maker Joakim Lamotte made a live broadcast from the site where he was subjected to harassment.

Living in Kronogården

Jorge Pereira has a history as a Social Democratic politician in Trollhättan, and is now volunteering in anti-racist and democratic issues. He has previously been named bridge builder of the year by the National Day Committee for his work against racism, and was nominated for the Raoul Wallenberg Prize. He, like Rossana Dinamarca, has lived in Kronogården and thinks that the problems there have been magnified in connection with the media coverage lately.

- I came there as a refugee from Chile, so I feel a little bit for this, he says and continues:

- We have been working on this for several years. I do not mind discussing segregation, but as it is obvious now, we did not think it was appropriate for us.