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Sweden: Anna Lindh killers conviction thrown out
By Steve James
21 July 2004
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The Svea Court of Appeals in Sweden has overturned Mijailo
Mijailovics conviction for the murder of Swedish Foreign
Minister, Anna Lindh. The court upheld an appeal on the basis
that Mijailovic was under the influence of a serious psychiatric
disorder at the time of the murder, rejecting the January
2004 verdict that had found the clearly disturbed Mijailovic guilty
and sentenced him to life imprisonment.
Anna Lindh was stabbed repeatedly in a Stockholm department
store in September 2003. She died the following day. Mijailovic,
who confessed to the murder, and was caught on CCTV at the crime
scene, was convicted despite evidence that the 25-year-old Swedish
Serb had repeatedly asked for psychiatric help. During his trial
earlier this year, Mijailovic claimed that voices in his head
urged him to attack, attack shortly before he stabbed
Lindh. Mijailovic said he had been feeling bad and had not slept
for days.
The murderand the callous verdictexposed deepening
social and political tensions in a country once considered as
among the most liberal. Lindh was killed at the end of a bitter
referendum campaign on membership of the eurozone, which revealed
a wide gulf between the pro-euro corporate and governmental elite,
and large sections of the Swedish population. Lindh was the public
face of the Yes campaign and it was immediately thought
that her death had been organised by far-right opponents of the
European Union. Mass demonstrations protested the murder, which
recalled the still unsolved killing of Lindhs political
mentor, Olof Palme in 1986.
Mijailovics arrest was the source of considerable relief
amongst Swedens ruling layers, and intense pressure was
brought to bear both to ensure a conviction and make sure that
no political issues were raised by the trial. In March an investigation
into Mijailovics mental health continued with the view that
the young man was sane and he therefore should serve his prison
sentence.
But the killing brought the dangerous degeneration of mental
health care in Sweden into international focus. The same day that
Anna Lindh died a five-year-old child was killed by an inmate
of a psychiatric institution. During 2003 at least five people
were killed and many more injured by people suffering serious
psychiatric conditions. In one incident, a 30-year-old man attacked
passers-by at a Stockholm underground station with an iron bara
70-year-old man was killed, and seven others injured. In another
incident, a man drove a car into the famous pedestrian-only tourist
area of Gamla Stan, also in Stockholm, killing two people and
injuring 28.
The Swedish Board of Health admitted in October 2003 that care
for people who suffer from serious psychiatric or personality
disorders does not function satisfactorily, had not
been coordinated and an overall perspective is lacking.
It accepted that patients with violent records were left to fend
for themselves, after examiners concluded they did not require
institutionalisation, while others were simply turned away because
of lack of resources. Another report found that 25 percent of
all homicides in Sweden were committed by people with psychotic
conditions.
Underlying this is the policy, introduced worldwide and implemented
in Sweden in the 1990s, of emptying large hospitals of mentally
ill people without providing adequate support and care for those
flung onto the streetsunder the guise of a policy of care-in-the-community.
Mijailovic, who had for many years been profoundly alienated
from the society around him, had been receiving intermittent psychiatric
care since he was 17. He had previously attacked his father. He
is just as much a victim of Swedish mental health policy as those
killed, injured, or left abandoned.
Mijailovics appeal was strengthened in June, when a new
psychiatric evaluation ordered by the Appeal Court found that
he was suffering from serious psychiatric disorders.
At the appeal, he appeared dishevelled and refused to testify,
merely shaking his head in answer to questions directed at him.
Althins presentation to the court reiterated that Mijailovic
had requested assistance and had been rejected. Mijailo
did not get the help he needed. One could say that society let
him down.
Althin contrasted Mijailovics sentence with that handed
out to the perpetrators of less high profile, but equally serious
attacks where the attackers had been recognised as being ill.
He pointed to the media pressure at the trial and queried whether
Mijailovic could ever get justice.
In the event, the court agreed that Mijailovic was a
traumatised person with a clear psychiatric problem.
See Also:
Sweden: Anna Lindhs
killer given life sentence
[17 April 2004]
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