I'll take that as: "Yes, I never had the Aftonbladet articles in front of me and was relying on Bjorkman all along."
I didn't realise you were discussing a personality. I was discussing the apparent difference in the JAIC report wherein it claims the first Swedish helicopter, Q97, arrived at 3:50 and then to and fro-ed from Hanko, Finland and Uto, Finland, from 5:00 in the morning all the way through to 10:50 am, after which it flew back to Sweden in the late afternoon, when the survivors list clearly shows nine survivors arriving at Huddinge hospital at 4:40am Stockholm time.
Q 97 (Super Puma)
The Swedish stand-by helicopter Q 97 took off from Visby at 0250 hrs, arriving at the scene of the accident at 0350 hrs. The OSC requested the helicopter to pick up as many people as possible from the sea.
On its first flight Q 97 rescued six survivors from the keels of two upside-down lifeboats. As instructed by the OSC, Q 97 flew them to Utö, where it landed at 0500 hrs. During the stop the crew called ARCC Arlanda, informing about the situation at the scene and asking for as many helicopters as possible.
After refuelling, Q 97 returned at 0540 hrs to the scene and rescued nine survivors, five from a liferaft and four from the water. They were in very poor condition. The pilot decided to take them directly to Hanko on the mainland. Q 97 landed at a sports field in Hanko at 0735 hrs, and local residents quickly summoned ambulances to the field. The crew was advised to fly to the Hanko coast guard station landing field, where they could refuel.
Q 97 took off from Hanko for the accident scene at 0810 hrs and returned to Hanko at 1050 hrs. After refuelling Q 97 returned to its base and finished the mission at 1615 hrs.
So the first Swedish helicopter to arrive didn't even fly back to Sweden until 16:15 in the afternoon.
Yet the original survivors lists clearly shows that nine survivors arrived at Huddinge at 4:40am
Avo Piht X1 Y 64 03.30 hrs Huddinge 04.40 hrs
Kahlev Vatras X1 Y 64 03.30 hrs Huddinge 04.40 hrs
Hannely (Anne) Veide X1 Y 64 03.30 hrs Huddinge 04.40 hrs
Hanka-Hannika Veide X1 Y 64 03.30 hrs Huddinge 04.40 hrs
Kaimar Kikas X2 Y 64 03.50 hrs Huddinge 04.40 hrs
Merit Kikas X2 Y 64 03.50 hrs Huddinge 04.40 hrs
Tiit Meos X2 Y 64 03.50 hrs Huddinge 04.40 hrs (dead*?)
Agur Targama X2 Y 64 03.50 hrs Huddinge 04.40 hrs
Ago Tomingas X2 Y 64 03.50 hrs Huddinge 04.40 hrs
And by police helicopter:
Viktor Bogdanov X Mariella 03.30 hrs Police helicopter Huddinge 24.00 hrs
Lembit Leiger X Mariella 03.30 hrs Police helicopter Huddinge 24.00 hrs
Tina Müür X Mariella 03.30 hrs Police helicopter Huddinge 24.00 hrs
Some of these are very high profile in the ship's personnel, including the chief engineer, the deputy Captain and the chief medical officer. It is hard to believe they could have been mistaken for anybody else. Note the first nine were rescued between 3:30 and 3:50, by 'hero Kenneth Svensson' and hence the correct source of
Aftonbladet's early story by a named journalist on 28 Sept 1994, as having been the first. As you can see from the list, above, it clearly names Helicopter Y64 as their rescuer. Where did
Aftonbladet get its information from, if not from Svensson himself and as confirmed by Huddinge, Stockholm, the scene of a clamour of journalists?
The 'first' named by the JAIC arrived by coincidence also at '3:50' saving nine survivors who were transferred to Finland and not to Sweden and by a completely different helicopter, not returning to the Swedish mainland until after four in the afternoon.
NB Kalev Vahdras was later found bruised and washed up on shore, drowned.