Many volunteers are on site with coffee and necessities to help those who have queued for hours to get into the Swedish Migration Board.

Kristjan Lootus, dancer known from Let's dance is one of those who took the initiative to collect and distribute coffee and sandwiches.

- Coffee thermoses started on this small park bench, then it has only grown with more and more tables, he says.

The queue winds around the house and many will have to continue queuing again tomorrow.

- There is no information at all about whether it pays to stay here in the queue.

There is no one out here from the Swedish Migration Agency, says Peter Svensson from Vendelsö, who is one of many private individuals who provide housing in their own home for a Ukrainian family.

Those without housing are given priority

When the authority does not have more power for the day, "you cut the queue".

The press service tells SVT Nyheter Stockholm that refugees who are completely without a roof over their heads are given priority before closing, but at present many live with volunteer Stockholmers or with relatives.

The City of Stockholm is waiting with its vacant housing, but it is required that the refugees first register their asylum applications with the Swedish Migration Board in order for these to be conveyed.

The Swedish Migration Agency's press service states that refugees who are completely homeless are given priority before this queue closes for the day.

And the authority is working to staff more staff.