SVT Nyheter has mapped the Swedish disinformation campaign against social services.

Here are some of the most influential players:

"Abou Anwar"

Self-employed, has lived in Sweden for over 30 years.

Has a strong personal commitment to the issue.

In a live broadcast on Tiktok, he has urged a father to "take back his children or become a martyr".

Claims himself that he does not call for acts of violence.

- When people talk about threats, I immediately stop, he says.

Hear "Abou Anwar" answer questions from SVT's reporter in the clip above.

The mother

Runs the organization Family United together with another parent who has had their children taken into care.

Among other things, organizes demonstrations and drives opinion in social media.

Claims that children can be taken into care just because they have messy hair or ketchup on their shirts.

She tells SVT Nyheter that none of "us front figures" who are driving the issue have called for violence, but that they are conducting a "fight to save children from the clutches of social services".

The Gothenburger

Has a YouTube channel with over half a million followers.

He has been a prominent figure since the campaign started last spring, when one of his videos with a desperate father went viral internationally.

Has continued to interview and disseminate distraught parents' stories about children taken by social services.

Recently, he traveled abroad to interview relatives of a man who reportedly killed himself after his nine children were taken into care.

The father

Have had several children cared for by social services.

The family's case became part of the disinformation campaign and has been raised repeatedly during the year in both Swedish live broadcasts and on foreign platforms.

The man himself has over 10,000 followers on Tiktok and frequently participates in live broadcasts with people within the movement.

The Facebook group

Children's rights My rights have close to 30,000 members.

Run and moderated by people who have had relatives taken into care and who also participate in demonstrations.

The group's aim is to draw attention to what they call "social abuse of power".

Many of the posts and comments are about children being kidnapped from their families.

Also has a Tiktok account that reaches thousands of users.