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Border town pays price for Sweden's no-lockdown as Norway reopens

Customs and police officers are seen at the border between Norway and Sweden, as Norway has introduced strict border control due to the coronavirus outbreak, in Svinesund

By Victoria Klesty

OSLO (Reuters) - The Swedish border town of Stromstad is paying a heavy price for Sweden's decision not to lock down its economy like neighbouring Norway and other Nordic nations to halt the spread of COVID-19.

Stromstad is just a two-hour drive from Oslo and popular with Norwegians who shop for cheaper consumer goods in Sweden, but Norway's lockdown, imposed in mid-March, put a stop to that.

And now, though Norway has lifted its lockdown following a sharp fall in COVID-19 cases, it still quarantines people returning from Sweden, which has registered more than four times the combined number of deaths in Norway, Denmark and Finland.

"When Norway closed its borders, (Stromstad) went overnight from full activity to total stillness," said Kent Hansson, the town's mayor.

"The border retail trade, it is (still) completely dead. The large supermarkets close to the border are completely deserted."

Sweden kept most businesses and schools open when the COVID-19 pandemic struck, bucking the international trend.

With a population of 10.2 million, Sweden has so far reported 5,370 COVID-19 deaths, while Norway - population 5.3 million - has had only 251 deaths.

NORDIC COOPERATION DENTED

Sweden's sudden isolation from its neighbours has come as something of a shock.

Nordic citizens have been able to travel without passports across the region and to reside in each other's countries without permits since the 1950s, creating deep personal, business, cultural and other ties across national borders.

"I do think that Nordic cooperation has taken a hit," said Hansson.

Norwegians back their government's approach, with almost three out of four people not wanting restrictions for leisure travel to Sweden to be lifted yet, according to a June 5 poll among 1,200 people by the Opinion survey group.

Some Swedes who work in Norway, which they have been able to do during the lockdown, have felt treated differently.

"People took a step back when I started to speak," said a Swedish artist who travels to Norway for work, and who declined to give his name to avoid drawing attention to himself. "So I didn't talk much when I was out in the shops. I nodded."

"You feel a bit dirty as a Swede. You feel a bit of shame for coming."

(Editing by Gwladys Fouche and Gareth Jones)