Could this be a load-bearing inner wall?

Wooden studs frame an interior wall under construction, with visible ceiling joists and a ladder nearby in a partially built room.

It feels a bit weak to be one (45x70 studs), but what made me wonder was how the ceiling joists are connected with two planks right where the inner wall is, which is not the case between any other beams in the joists. If it is load-bearing, could I then move it a few meters towards the center?
 
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Can't really find anything in the blueprints either:

Floor plan showing a storage room and garage layout, with detailed measurements and notes about column placement and area size in square meters.

ANM notes with Swedish construction terms: outer wall, inner wall, and facade cabinet installation details.

None of this giving any clever person some clues? :)
 
It is not load-bearing. The rafters are wstolar and are self-supporting.
 
Mikael_L
It can hardly be load-bearing.

The two studs between the rafters seem to be there to attach the wall at the desired spot, i.e., right next to the rafter. The fact that the rafter does not rest on the wall itself and the short span suggests that the partition wall is not load-bearing.
 
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