Rawa Majid rumoured dead, Sweden's most-wanted gang leader may have been killed abroad
- Rawa Majid, known as 'The Iceman,' is internationally wanted and has evaded Swedish law enforcement for years while allegedly commanding gang operations from Turkey and the Middle East
- Multiple unconfirmed scenarios surrounding his possible death are circulating, though Swedish police have not confirmed any of them
- Majid's Foxtrot network has been linked to dozens of shootings and bombings across Sweden, making him a central figure in the country's gang violence epidemic
- If confirmed, his death raises immediate questions about succession wars, retaliatory violence, and the fracturing of criminal hierarchies Swedish authorities have failed to dismantle through legal channels
Rumours that Rawa Majid — the internationally wanted gang leader known as "The Iceman" — is dead have begun circulating in Swedish criminal networks and media. Aftonbladet reports that multiple possible scenarios surrounding his alleged death are under discussion, though neither Swedish police nor foreign authorities have confirmed anything. This is not the first time death rumours have attached themselves to Majid, but the current round appears to be taken more seriously by those tracking his network.
Majid has been Sweden's most-wanted man for years. From abroad — reportedly operating from Turkey and at various points from the Middle East — he is alleged to have directed the Foxtrot network, one of the most violent criminal organisations in Swedish history. The network has been linked to shootings, bombings, and extortion campaigns that have turned Swedish suburbs into conflict zones. Swedish prosecutors have issued international arrest warrants. Interpol has circulated his name. None of it brought him into a Swedish courtroom. The pattern is familiar across Europe's gang landscape: criminal leaders who settle in countries with weaker extradition frameworks, limited bilateral cooperation, or simply less interest in doing Sweden's policing for it. Turkey, in particular, has been a recurring safe harbour for Nordic gang figures — a fact that Swedish authorities have acknowledged with visible frustration but little result.
The question now is what Majid's absence — whether through death, incapacitation, or deep hiding — would mean for the structures he built. Gang networks with a single dominant leader can go two ways when that leader disappears: they consolidate under a lieutenant, or they fragment into competing factions that fight over territory and revenue. Both outcomes tend to produce violence. Swedish criminologists have noted that the Foxtrot network already showed signs of internal tension, with rival sub-groups jockeying for influence. Removing the figure who held those tensions in check could accelerate conflict rather than reduce it. Swedish police have spent years trying to dismantle the network through arrests of mid-level operatives, encrypted communication intercepts, and cooperation with Europol. Progress has been incremental. Dozens of Foxtrot-linked individuals have been convicted, but the leadership layer remained beyond reach as long as Majid stayed abroad.
If Majid is indeed dead, the manner matters. A killing by a rival network would signal a new phase of inter-gang warfare with its own retaliation logic. A death from other causes would leave the succession question open without an obvious external enemy to rally against — potentially the more destabilising scenario for Foxtrot's internal cohesion. Swedish authorities have not commented publicly on the rumours, which is standard practice when intelligence is still being verified.
What is already confirmed is the broader failure the rumours illuminate. Sweden's most-wanted criminal suspect may have died — of whatever cause, in whatever country — without ever facing a Swedish court. The state that charged him could not reach him. If someone else did, that tells its own story about where power actually resides in Europe's criminal ecosystem and how little of it flows through legal institutions. Sweden spent years issuing warrants. The warrants are still outstanding.
Sources: Aftonbladet