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Justin Bieber tour bus raided for drugs Justin Bieber tour bus raided for drugs
(35 minutes later)
Drugs have been found on board a tour bus used by the Canadian singer Justin Bieber, Swedish police say. The latest chapter in Justin Bieber's European tour escapade was added on Thursday when Swedish police said they had found drugs and a stun gun on the pop singer's bus.
The police spokesman Lars Bystrom said a small amount of drugs and a stun gun were found when officers raided the empty bus parked at the Globen concert venue in Stockholm, where Bieber was performing on Wednesday. Lars Bystrom, spokesman for Stockholm police, said a small amount of drugs and a stun gun were discovered during a search of the bus, which had been parked under the Globen concert venue in Stockholm, where Bieber was performing on Wednesday.
Bystrom said no one had been arrested. He declined to identify the drug, saying it had been sent to a laboratory for analysis. Bystrom declined to identify the drug, saying that it was sent to a lab for analysis. He said no one was arrested since the bus was empty at the time of the search.
Police searched the bus after smelling marijuana coming from inside it when it was parked outside the hotel where Bieber was staying. The drug squad was alerted and searched the bus during the concert. Swedish police decided to act after smelling marijuana coming from inside the bus while it was parked outside the hotel where Bieber was staying in the Swedish capital. The drug squad searched the bus during the concert, Bystrom said.
Bieber is in Stockholm as part of a world tour. The incident is the latest in Bieber's tumultuous European tour, which has included a monkey detention, a Holocaust museum furore and a health scare.
The 19-year-old singer struggled with his breathing and fainted backstage at a London show. He was taken to a hospital, only to be caught on camera clashing with paparazzi.
In Germany, the Canadian teenage idol had to leave his monkey in quarantine since he didn't have the necessary papers for the animal.
In the Netherlands, Bieber became the focus of intense criticism for writing an entry into a guestbook at the Anne Frank House museum in Amsterdam, saying he hoped the Jewish teenager, who died in a Nazi concentration camp, "would have been a Belieber" if her fate had turned out differently.
The comment provoked a flood of comments on the museum's Facebook page, with many people criticising the singer for gross insensitivity.
In Norway, where Bieber enjoys enormous popularity, education officials in a remote district rescheduled mid-term exams for school students so that the singer's fans could attend the concert in the capital and not have to worry about missing the tests.
By Thursday afternoon, Bieber had left Sweden and was in Finland, where he is due to play in the capital Helsinki on Friday evening.