Foreign
Minister Anna Lindh was an outspoken
human rights advocate who was touted
by many in Sweden as a future candidate for prime minister.
Lindh, 46, died on September 11th after being stabbed multiple
times in a downtown Stockholm department store. She underwent more
than 10 hours of surgery for severe internal bleeding and injuries
to her liver and stomach, doctors said.
"Anna Lindh has left us. The family has lost a mother and
wife. Social Democracy has lost one of its most skillful politicians,"
an emotional Prime Minister Goeran Persson said. "The government
has lost a competent politician and a good working colleague. Sweden
has lost its face against the world."
White House press secretary Scott McClellan said the United States
shares the grief of the Swedish people. "The president and
the people of the United States were shocked and saddened to learn
of the murder of Swedish Foreign Minister Anna Lindh," McClellan
said. "Mrs. Lindh was a tireless
advocate for freedom and peace."
For Swedes, her death rekindled
memories of the Feb. 28, 1986, murder of Prime Minister Olof Palme,
who was killed while walking home from a movie theater with his
wife. Like Lindh, he had no bodyguards. His murder remain unsolved.
Lindh, one of the Scandinavian country's most popular politicians,
was a top member of the ruling Social Democratic party. She also
was one of the Swedish government's leading figures in the campaign
to persuade the country's 9 million residents to adopt the euro.
Persson named her to lead the Foreign Ministry in 1998, and Lindh
moved quickly to put her stamp on
the position.
She was outspoken on several international issues, voicing her
opposition to the recent war in Iraq and urging the Israelis and
Palestinians to both stop their violence and start negotiating.
Lindh also garnered a reputation
as a fierce and dedicated proponent of human rights.
Earlier this year, she chided President Bush as a "lone
ranger" for his decision to unilaterally invade Iraq
without U.N. approval.
But she also sometimes recognized the need for force, telling members
of the Swedish Riksdag, or parliament,
in January the threat of military action was needed to pressure
Saddam Hussein to comply with U.N. resolutions to disarm.
Born in the Stockholm suburb of Enskede in 1957, Lindh became a
lawyer with a reputation for preserving the environment.
She rose to prominence in Sweden's long-dominant Social Democratic
Party and served as chairman of the Swedish Social Democratic Youth
from 1984-1990. She was a member of parliament from 1982-1985 and
was appointed foreign minister when the Social Democrats regained
power in 1994.
Lisa Nilsson, a 24-year-old nurse, called Lindh a role
model for young women who want careers and family.
"She showed that it's possible to achieve what you want,"
Nilsson said after placing a red rose on the mound of flowers outside
the hospital where Lindh died. "She was the only one who made
me listen to politics. She could talk on our level. She could tell
us things so simply."
She is survived by her husband,
Bo Holmberg, a local politician, and two sons, David, 12, and Filip,
9.
|