Hear more from Viktoriia Stupakova and others involved in the video.

From 1 July, it is the responsibility of the municipalities to arrange housing for those in need of protection from Ukraine, after the government decides on a new law.

In mid-June, the Swedish Migration Agency issued new distribution figures for how many refugees each municipality should receive.

The figures are lower than previous figures.

For Kristianstad, for example, the figure ended up at 96 - something that worries many refugees in the municipality.

Need to move

Today, there are more than 300 Ukrainian refugees in Kristianstad municipality.

Almost 100 children are enrolled in the school.

The vast majority of Ukrainian refugees who are in Kristianstad have arranged accommodation on their own - they live at home with host families or in people's summer cottages.

Many cannot stay long.

Maybe the summer cottage should be rented out or the host family does not have the opportunity to house them anymore.

Some have expected to get help with housing from Kristianstad municipality eventually.

But Kristianstad will only arrange accommodation for 96 people - the new distribution number the municipality has received from the Swedish Migration Board.

The distribution figure according to the Swedish Migration Agency's previous scenario was 480. The reason for the reduction is that the forecast has changed over how many Ukrainian refugees will come to Sweden this year.

"Can make requests for a municipality"

Karin Andrén at the Swedish Migration Agency's press service writes the following in an email:

“Those in need of protection who can no longer live in housing that they have arranged themselves may turn to the Swedish Migration Board, which then arranges housing through instructions to the municipality.

Where in the country it will be depends on where there are vacancies.

The person in need of protection can make a request for a municipality, but the authority cannot guarantee that the person in need of protection gets a place to live there. ”