Continuing, he listed the suspects in the cases and the home counties of the alleged perpetrators.Mr Springare wrote: “Iraq, Iraq, Turkey, Syria, Afghanistan, Somalia, Somalia, Syria again, Somalia, unknown, unknown country, Sweden.“Half of the suspects, we can’t be sure because they don’t have any valid papers. Which in itself usually means that they’re lying about their nationality and identity. Now we are only talking about Örebro municipality.”During the rant, he noted that only one of the suspects was a Swedish national as he added this is what it had been like for the past 10-15 years.Following the brutal attack on the immigration policy, social media users accused the police officer of being racist – something Mr Springare denied.In a second Facebook post, the Swede said he supported immigration, however, he was concerned about the crime and the surge in migrant criminals sending the system to the brink.Mr Springare is not the first Swede to suffer a backlash after publicly declaring the liberal country’s migrant policy was threatening to destroy the country from within.In January Czech author Katerina Janouch was accused of “spreading Russian propaganda” after she said people wanted to learn how to shoot because they were scared.Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven branding her statements “strange” and added: “Respect for the Swedish and Nordic model remains, we combine productivity with equality, good working conditions for employees with productive and efficient business and welfare that helps. There is a strong belief in that.”

However, speaking to Express.co.uk, a concerned Swedish citizen hit back at the criticism against Ms Janouch, as he said the author had not exaggerated the increasing despair gripping the Nordic nation.

He said: “Katerina pointed out there are a number of areas in Sweden where the police, fire services, emergency services, won’t go and they are not the only ones.”

In 2015, Sweden’s public sector was caught off guard as it received more than 160,000 asylum applications with a population of just 9.5million.

The unparalleled growth sparked warnings the public services could not absorb the impact as the country has seen a surge in crime and violent incidents since the migrant crisis started.