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STOCKHOLM, April 13 (Xinhua) --- The Swedish population is expected to hit 10 million in 2017, a year earlier than predicted, and immigration is a key reason for the country's rapid growth, according to Statistics Sweden Wednesday.
The Swedish population is growing at record speed and has not grown this fast since the nineteenth century.
In the coming years, the population is expected to grow by around 1.5 percent annually, according to Statistics Sweden, and by 2020, there will be 739,000 more people living in the country than today.
Sweden's population passed the nine-million mark in 2004 and by the end of this year, there will be 10 million people living in Sweden. It will then take only eight years for the population to grow by a further million.
Immigration is a key factor behind the unprecedented rapid population growth. In the next five years, an estimated 857,000 people will immigrate to Sweden, while a total 287,000 are expected to leave the country in the same period, meaning migration will represent an increase of 570,000 people.
Another contributing factor to Sweden's population growth is that the number of births outnumber the number of deaths. Over the next five years, an estimated 623,000 children will be born and 455,000 people will pass away. That means births will outnumber deaths by 169,000.
However, Statistics Sweden also stressed that its population prognosis is uncertain.
A statement from the agency said: ""The assumption about immigrants has been changed the nearest coming years compared to the previous projection. This is according to the Swedish Migration Agency that has changed its forecast about asylum seekers. It is always difficult to predict immigration in the short term as well as the long term.""
The agency pointed out that the number of asylum seekers and the number of people granted residence permits can be affected by political decisions in Sweden and abroad and that decisions can quickly change on the EU level.
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WASHINGTON
Montravius Adams Limited Jersey , Oct. 12 (Xinhua) -- The world has long been used to U.S. President Donald Trump taking a stance against multilateralism. Still, the sudden U.S. announcement Thursday to retreat from UNESCO -- the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization -- raised eyebrows worldwide.
According to a State Department statement, the decision "reflects U.S. concerns with mounting arrears at UNESCO, the need for fundamental reform in the organization, and continuing anti-Israel bias at UNESCO."
But the fundamental issue is the Trump administration's distrust of multilateral organizations and a growing frustration over America's place in an increasingly multipolar world.
AN INGRAINED IMPATIENCE
Since taking office this January, the new White House leader has made no secret of his penchant for challenging multilateralism.
Having already scrapped the historic Paris climate deal, the comprehensive pact signed by 195 countries last year to reduce gas emissions, Trump also wants to "decertify" the landmark Iran nuclear deal. The critical Iran nuclear deal was signed two years ago with the five permanent U.N. Security Council member countries plus Germany, to avert the likelihood of a nuclear crisis in the Middle East.
Trump also lashed out at the UN in his first speech at the UN General Assembly in New York last month, saying, "Too often, the focus of this organization has not been on results, but on bureaucracy and process. In some cases, states that seek to subvert this institution's noble ends have hijacked the very systems that are supposed to advance them."
In the specific case of UNESCO, Washington has long hammered it for so-called corruption, low-efficiency and mismanagement.
As early as 1984, the Ronald Reagan administration pulled the United States out of the agency, citing what it called the U.N. body's ideological tilt toward the former Soviet Union against the West, and the U.S. stayed away till 2003.
The return, however, hasn't saved Washington from having its ambitions thwarted at the multilateral institution.
Since he became president, Trump has held back from appointing an ambassador to the agency. The withdrawal has been proved to be well calculated as it was announced right ahead of the election result of the UNESCO chief, according to observers.
LONG-LASTING GRUDGE
During the Republican administration of George W. Bush, the United States stopped providing funds for UNESCO right after the organization voted to give Palestine official membership in 2011.
The decision recognized Palestine as an actual sovereign country, something unacceptable to the United States and Israel. Yet Washington has still maintained an office at the UNESCO headquarters in Paris, France.
In July, UNESCO declared the old Palestinian city of Hebron in the West Bank a World Heritage Site, a move that further irritated Washington.
As a long-time ally of Tel Aviv, Washington is also reviewing its membership of the Geneva-based U.N. Human Rights Council, citing an anti-Israel tilt within the agency.
Trump's decision has received the expected welcome in Israel, with the latter saying it too will quit UNESCO soon after the United States.
SWELLING U.S. ARREARS
In 2011, the U.S. government announced it would halt making financial contributions to UNESCO, which accounted for 22 percent of the group's whole-year budget, in reprisal for Palestine's full membership.
The government said it had to cut funds because a 1990s law prevents the U.S. from funding any UN agencies recognizing Palestine as a state.
Consequently, U.S. arrears at UNESCO have been snowballing each year. Currently, the United States owes over 500 million U.S. dollars to the organization.
The American reluctance to pay due membership fees has negatively impacted the agency's routine o.
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