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WSWS : News
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Sweden: Anna Lindhs killer given life sentence
By Niall Green and Steve James
17 April 2004
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A clearly disturbed 25-year-old man, Mijailo Mijailovic, has
been sentenced to life imprisonment for killing Swedens
Social Democratic foreign minister Anna Lindh in a knife attack.
Anna Lindh, 46, was repeatedly stabbed as she shopped September
10, 2003, in a Stockholm department store. She died of her wounds
early the following day.
The killing shocked the Swedish population and generated large
memorial demonstrations against the murder of the popular politician.
Her killing seemed to embody the political tensions brewing across
Europe, reaching deep into even the wealthiest, and ostensibly
most stable, of European nations.
Lindhs death occurred just days before a hotly contested
referendum on whether Sweden should enter the euro-zone or retain
the krona. Lindh was a euro-supporter, and the most visible figure
in a pro-euro campaign that had the support of most of the media
and the dominant sections of Swedish business.
Her murder also invited immediate comparison with the still
unsolved 1986 killing of then Social Democratic Swedish prime
minister and Lindhs political mentor, Olof Palme, also in
Stockholm. Given the early arrest in the Lindh killing of a known
right-winger, Per Olof Svensson, with distant connections to the
royal family, deep divisions within the Swedish establishment
over both the Palme killing and the euro seemed about to be exposed.
During the 1990s, Sweden saw a spate of killings and violent
attacks against immigrants, trade unionists and state officials.
In 1999, the murder of Bjorn Soderberg triggered the largest anti-fascist
protests seen in Sweden since World War II.
The Swedish establishment moved speedily to close the incident
following Mijailo Mijailovics arrest, confession, and Svenssons
simultaneous release. Mijailovic, with a long history of both
psychiatric problems and knife attacks, claimed to the police
that unnamed voices and Jesus himself told him to
attack Lindh.
The murder, the press claimed, was motiveless,
the result of a random attack. Other reports noted Mijailovics
Serbian origin, suggesting that he had retained a hatred for Lindh
following the NATO attack on Serbia in 1999, which Sweden, and
Lindh, supported.
After his trial in January, Mijailovics legal defence
moved that the charge of murder be reduced to manslaughter on
the grounds that he was not in control of his faculties at the
time of the attack.
Mijailovics perception of reality was so affected
by the mix of medication he was taking that he had no idea about
the consequences of his actions, said his lawyer, Peter
Althin. Mijailovic, who has received repeated psychiatric treatment
since his teens, testified that he was chronically sleep-deprived
and under heavy medication.
Swedish law does not permit anyone who commits a crime while
afflicted with aggravated mental illness to be imprisoned,
although they must undergo compulsory psychiatric care. Mijailovic
was required to submit to weeks of psychiatric evaluation to determine
his mental condition at the time of the murder before being sentenced.
But remarkably, given what has emerged about Mijailovics
mental state, the six weeks of tests concluded that he was not
suffering from a serious mental illness and could therefore be
jailed for murder.
Mijailovics lawyers request for Swedens Board
of Health to review the psychiatric tests was thrown out despite
the fact that Agneta Blidberg, who led the prosecution case against
Mijailovic, supported the application. Blidberg wanted to remove
any doubts about Mijailovics mental condition. Swedish courts
usually allow such reviews if requested, but Chief Judge Nilsson
claimed that there were no good reasons for ordering
a review.
Peter Althin described the courts decision as deeply
regrettable and complained that psychiatric examination
had many weak points. Now we will have a debate
that will always be there, lingering on, he said. Athlin
also warned, If Mijailovic is mentally ill then he needs
care ... he cant get that care in prison.
Judge Nilsson gave Mijailovic the maximum sentence for murder
under Swedish law. In Sweden, life sentences usually amount to
prison terms of 11 to 15 years. He was also ordered to pay 150,000
kronor in damages to Lindhs family.
Relief from the Swedish government and media at the outcome
of the trial was palpable and made clear that political considerations
have overridden concern for justice.
Swedens justice minister Thomas Bodstroem told the Dagens
Nyheter, After the murder of Olof Palme, another unsolved
murder would have been another open wound in democratic society.
The Svenska Dagbladet reassured its readers, Unlike
the Palme investigation, which collapsed, this did not become
a national trauma. Theres nothing here for private detectives
and conspiracy theorists.
Another side to the case is the brutal example being set. Mijailovic
was undoubtedly a severely troubled young man and his incarceration
indicates a disregard for the well-being of the population as
a whole.
The number of Swedes disabled by mental health troubles has
soared over recent years in proportion to the deepening of social
problems in the county. For example, those claiming disability
from work for more than 90 days at a time due to psychological
problems increased more than fourfold from 1998 to 2003.
Work environments have gotten a lot tougher in recent
years. There are not as many places where employees can go to
take a break, and most jobs now demand very intensive work from
their employees, said Urban Clareus, head of insurance firm
Alectas health and welfare department.
The problem is especially acute among young people. Over the
past five years, the number of Swedes under 35 claiming long-term
disability increased more than sevenfold.
Sections of the press have also taken the opportunity to rail
against the still relatively humane conditions Mijailovic can
expect in Swedens prison system.
Mihailovics lawyers are appealing the decision. Judge
Nilsson reported that defence attorneys had filed the appeal on
April 12. No date for the hearing has been set, but the judge
said it could take place within five weeks.
See Also:
Sweden: Anna Lindh murder
trial ends
[4 February 2004]
Sweden: Murder of
Foreign Minister Lindh expresses volatile social relations
[13 September 2003]
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