Boy, 8, killed in grenade attack on apartment in Sweden Published duration 23 August 2016

image caption Yuusuf Warsame was visiting relatives with his mother, brother and sister

An eight-year-old boy has been killed after a grenade was thrown into a flat in the Swedish city of Gothenburg, police said.

Yuusuf Warsame from Birmingham in the UK was sleeping in the living room of the flat in the Biskopsgarten area, where he was visiting relatives.

Police said the "despicable" attack may have been linked to an underworld feud.

A man convicted over a fatal shooting in the area last year was registered as living at the address, police said.

"We'll have to see if the motive is linked to that. Our theory is that it may be," said police spokesperson Thomas Fuxborg, The Local reported.

At least five children and several adults were in the flat when the grenade was hurled inside.

image copyright AFP/Getty image caption The flat was full of people at the time of the attack, police said

Yuusuf died of his injuries on the way to hospital. Mr Fuxborg said he was not a member of the family registered at the address.

The boy's mother, sister and brother were in the same room when the attack happened but sustained only minor injuries, a relative told the Birmingham Mail

Gangland feud

The fatal shooting in March 2015 was part of a vendetta within Gothenburg's Somali community, police said.

Men armed with automatic weapons burst into a Biskopsgarden pub, gunning down a man known to police and an innocent bystander in a spray of bullets.

Eight people were convicted earlier this month and handed sentences ranging from seven years to life in prison.

Local newspaper Goteborgs-Posten said the pub shooting was the culmination of violent incidents between rival drugs gangs.

Sweden generally has low crime rates but police have had difficulty addressing violence in poorer neighbourhoods in Stockholm, Gothenburg and Malmo.

Over the course of the summer, cars have been set alight on an almost nightly basis in some neighbourhoods.