|
Sweden’s popular foreign minister Anna Lindh is the third high-ranking
Swedish political opponent of Zionism to have been murdered since 1948,
which raises the question: Was Lindh assassinated because of her
outspoken opposition to Israel’s occupation of Palestine?
When
Sweden’s foreign minister Anna Lindh was brutally stabbed by an unknown
assailant while shopping in an upscale Stockholm department store, it
marked the third murder in 55 years of a high-level Swedish opponent of
Zionist aggression in Palestine.
While
the controlled press was quick to point out an unidentified suspect,
later released, with alleged ties to “neo-Nazis,” it has virtually
ignored the historical precedents that suggest that the killing of Lindh
may have been an assassination aimed at silencing an influential
political opponent of the Zionist extremists who control the Israeli
government and wield great influence in Washington.
Anna
Lindh’s Sweden “has had more of an impact on Palestinian history than
closer or greater powers throughout the world,” Hanan Ashrawi, the
Palestinian professor and negotiator, wrote after the murder.
The death of Lindh and the late UN representative in
Baghdad,
Sergio Vieira de Mello, represents the loss of “two voices who called
with determination for salvaging the UN’s role in Iraq and for
implementing its resolutions in Palestine,” Bouthaina Shaaban, a
minister in the new Syrian government, wrote in The Daily Star
(Lebanon).
Shaaban
noted that Lindh had:-
·
Called upon the European Union, on April 3, 2002, to sever ties with
Israel in protest against Israeli practices;
·
Called on US President George W. Bush to deny Sharon unconditional
support, as this would inflame the Middle East;
·
Stressed that the only solution in the Middle East rested in ending the
Israeli occupation (otherwise everybody would become a hostage to the
conflict);
·
Played an important role in shaping the EU’s decision to adopt a policy
toward Palestinian President Yasser Arafat different from that of the
U.S.;
·
Confirmed the importance of Arafat as a partner in the peace process,
rejecting Washington’s claims that he supported terrorism;
·
Stood firmly against the war on Iraq;
·
And warned of the dangers of changing another country’s regime without
the support of international law.
Regarding weapons of mass destruction, Lindh called for the creation of
a Middle East free of such weapons, including Israel. Lindh strongly
opposed the Anglo-American aggression and occupation of Iraq.
A GLOBAL LOSS
Sweden’s effect on the Middle East “has been consistently constructive,
positive, and human with a deep-seated tradition of fairness, justice,
and peaceful intervention,” Ashrawi wrote, “Unfortunately, three such
Swedish champions had met with violent and untimely deaths, each a
tragedy unto itself, but a national and global loss in the larger scheme
of things.”
On the
ill-fated day Lindh had gone with a friend to Nordiska Kompaniet (NK) a
few blocks from the parliament building on Sept. 10 to buy an outfit for
an upcoming televised debate on the European common currency, the Euro.
Lindh’s image had appeared on posters in Sweden for the “yes” campaign
she supported.
Although there was no recognizable leader for the “no” side, opinion
polls before the Sept. 14 referendum showed 53 percent of Swedish women
remained opposed to the Euro, with only 29 percent in favor.
When
Lindh died on Thursday, Sept. 11, after more than 6 hours of surgery,
Sweden’s prime minister called off campaigning for the Sunday referendum
on the Euro. With the “no” vote strongly ahead of the “yes” vote there
was some speculation and wishful thinking that Lindh’s murder would
boost the “yes” side.
SWEDEN
REJECTS EURO
The
Euro referendum went ahead and with more than 80 percent of the Swedish
electorate having cast ballots, the “no” side won by a large margin of
14 percent: 56 percent opposed and 42 percent in favor.
The
un-elected president of the European Commission, Romano Prodi, clearly
at a loss for words in an interview with CNN after the vote, pooh-poohed
the very idea of using a referendum to decide whether a nation should
adopt the Euro. The Swedish results, Prodi said, were “worse than I
expected.”
Charles
Hodgson of CNN reminded Prodi that in every nation where the people had
decided on the Euro in a referendum, it had been rejected.
Sweden’s rejection of the Euro, however, clearly does not bode well for
the Euro in other European nations that have retained their fiscal
sovereignty, primarily Great
Britain
and Denmark, where similar referenda will be held in the future.
MURDER IN BROAD DAYLIGHT
Lindh
was shopping without bodyguards at the upscale NK department store, when
she was savagely stabbed in the stomach, chest and arm, just before 4
p.m.
Hanna
Sundberg, an eyewitness, told The Associated Press that she saw a man
chase Lindh up an escalator from the ground floor to the first upper
level into a store called Filippa K.
"She
fell on the floor and the man was stabbing her in the stomach," she
said. "She laid on the floor and it looked as if a tall man, wearing a
peaked cap, was hitting her," she told AP. "But when he ran away, he
threw away a knife."
Sundberg ran to Lindh, who said: "God, he has stabbed me in the
stomach!"
Another
witness, Anna Lekander, who had been in the boutique, where there were
“only a handful of shoppers at the time,” said she had not noticed that
Lindh was there as well.
Lekander said nothing about a man chasing Lindh up the escalator.
Lekander told the BBC that she had learned from others who were present
that Lindh had entered the shop together with a friend, seemingly with
"no bodyguards or anything.”
Soon
after leaving the shop, Lekander heard people shouting from inside,
"Catch him, catch him”.
"It
happened very quickly, I could see people running and I went back into
the shop," Lekander said.
"I
could see a person lying on the floor, but I didn't know it was her,”
Lekander said. "There was blood everywhere.”
The
attacker fled down the escalator and was able to flee without any
resistance from security guards. Police were reported to be searching
for a man wearing a camouflage jacket.
Lindh was initially reported to be serious condition but her injuries
were said not to be “life-threatening” as she underwent six hours of
surgery at the Karolinska
Hospital. Doctors said she suffered extensive damage to her
liver and had internal bleeding.
A
company named Hufvudstaden owns NK, a 100-year-old department store
founded by Josef E. Sachs. AFP asked Michael Lorenz, owner of Duty
Security, which provides security for NK, about the number and location
of guards at the time Lindh was murdered. Lorenz would not say how many
guards were on duty or what kind of security detail his firm provided at
the exits of NK.
Lorenz
also refused to answer questions about how an assailant could attack a
prominent Swedish politician in broad daylight in a department store
with numerous closed-circuit video cameras and security guards and flee
without encountering any resistance or security personnel in pursuit.
PALESTINIAN SUPPORTER
Ylva Anna Maria Lindh was a rising star in
Sweden’s
ruling Social Democrat Party (SDP). At age 46, Lindh was an intelligent
and articulate politician with more than 20 years experience in
government. An outspoken and attractive foreign minister, Lindh was
expected to be Sweden’s next prime minister. She has two young sons, 8
and 13.
As
Sweden’s foreign minister since 1998, Lindh’s “main objectives were to
encourage dialogue between the rich and the poor worlds, and to support
the independence of the Palestinian and Kurdish peoples,” according to
Olle Svenning, London correspondent of the Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet
and personal friend of Lindh.
Lindh
was an outspoken critic of Israel’s prime minister Ariel Sharon and his
brutal policies affecting the millions of Palestinians living under
Israeli occupation: "Our stand is firm and clear,” the foreign minister
said in an October 2001 interview :-
·
"Israeli settlements on the West Bank must go;
·
there must be a Palestinian state;
·
Israel must vacate occupied areas on the West Bank and Gaza Strip; and
·
end all extra-territorial executions and attacks on Palestinians.
·
This should be done immediately.”
Asked
if she expected anything from a dialogue with the Israeli government led
by Sharon, whose “record of war crimes” was described as “being without
parallel in post-War history,” Lindh replied, “I agree. It makes no
sense to have a dialogue with Sharon’s government. There will be no
talks with him from our side.”
In June
2002, the youth wing of Lindh’s Social Democrat Party pressed charges
against Sharon of war crimes and violation of international law. At the
time Lindh said she understood there was "both bitterness and anger
because the Israeli government is guilty of violating international
law."
"Sometimes the Israeli-Palestinian conflict makes me so angry that I
kick the wastepaper bin in my office or throw things around," Lindh
said. She had described Sharon as a “maniac” and said on Swedish
television that she would not buy Israeli goods and fruits sold in
Swedish markets.
At a
meeting of European Union member states in April 2002, Lindh had called
for the EU to cut relations with Israel to protest the repressive
practices of Israeli occupation forces against the Palestinians.
A
frequent critic of Sharon, Lindh said in May 2002 that her goal was that
"Israeli citizens will turn against the military policies of Sharon."
“Israel's government,” she said, “has chosen a course of action that
risks placing the country outside of the rest of the world community.”
Lindh
criticized U.S. President George W. Bush for ignoring the Palestinian
President Yasser Arafat, saying U.S. policies rewarded “Sharon's
violence.”
“I am
very worried about this American debate,” Lindh said on Swedish radio.
“I think this discussion equating Arafat with terrorists is both
inappropriate and stupid. It is a very dangerous policy.”
“It
contradicts the entire peace process... and can only lead to outright
war in the Middle East,” she said.
At a
gathering of European foreign ministers in Riva del Garda, Italy, days
before she was killed, Lindh had blamed the U.S. and Israel for the
collapse of the “Roadmap” peace plan and resignation of Palestinian
prime minister Mahmoud Abbas.
Lindh
said Abbas had been given “the kiss of death” when the Bush
Administration and Israel had decided to deal only with him and sideline
Palestinian president Yasser Arafat.
“Of
course Arafat's unwillingness to give Abu Mazen (Abbas) increased power
was decisive, but Abu Mazen's position would have been much stronger if
Israel had also contributed to the peace process," Lindh told Swedish
radio at the meeting in Italy. Lindh said Israel had continued building
illegal Jewish settlements, erecting a wall separating Israel and the
Palestinian territories, and assassinating leaders of Hamas.
Lindh’s
principled and unequivocal position on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
was like that of the late Swedish prime minister Olof Palme, who was
assassinated in Stockholm in 1986, and Count Folke Bernadotte, the
United Nation’s Mediator on Palestine, who was brutally murdered by a
Zionist terror gang near Jerusalem in 1948.
The assassination of Bernadotte, “at the hands of the Israeli terrorist
organization… began a lethal Swedish connection with
Palestine,” Ashrawi wrote. “Palestine
lost its first Swedish champion,” Ashrawi wrote, when Bernadotte “was
brutally murdered, shot at point blank, by three Jewish Stern Gang
members in Jerusalem.”
In
1986, then Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme was shot as he walked home
from the cinema with his wife. As Ashrawi noted, Palme had sought
recognition for the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and a
validation for the peaceful resolution of the conflict through ending
the 1967 Israeli occupation of Palestinian and other Arab lands. Palme’s
politics were based on international legality and UN resolutions, and “a
deeply-felt commitment to fairness and human decency,” Ashrawi wrote.
Ulf
Dahlsten, Palme's personal secretary in 1986, said that Lindh was the
most important Swedish political figure since the late prime minister.
In her speeches against the war in Iraq and in support of the
Palestinians, Lindh was seen as Palme's natural heir. There have long
been rumors in intelligence circles that Lindh was the daughter of Palme.
American Free Press asked Ninni Jonzon, news editor of Göteborgs-Posten,
if there was any discussion in the Swedish media comparing Lindh’s
murder with the political assassination of Bernadotte, or the unsolved
murder of Palme. “Absolutely not,” Jonzon said. Asked why, she replied,
“I don’t know.”
ASSASSINATION OF BERNADOTTE
As UN
mediator, Bernadotte had the mandate to "promote a peaceful adjustment
of the future situation in Palestine" and to mediate beyond the terms of
the Nov. 29, 1947 Partition Plan, in which the U.N. General Assembly had
voted to partition Palestine into Arab and Jewish states.
The Partition Plan, which gave the Zionists more than half of
Palestine,
led to war between Arab and Zionist forces after Israel proclaimed its
establishment on May 14, 1948. Bernadotte's first action had been to
arrange a truce, which lasted from June 11 to July 9.
Bernadotte put forward a proposal for solving the conflict, which
suggested that Jerusalem be placed under Jordanian rule, since all the
area around the city was designated for the Palestinian Arab state.
The U.N. partition plan had declared Jerusalem an international city
that was to be ruled by neither Arab nor Jew. But Jewish terrorist
groups, headed by the Polish immigrants Yitzhak Shamir and Menachem
Begin, who both later served as Israeli prime ministers, rejected
partition and claimed all of Palestine and Jordan
for the Jewish state. These Jewish extremists saw Bernadotte as an enemy
- an obstacle to their agenda - that had to be removed.
While
no one was ever charged for the murders of Palme or Bernadotte, three
Zionist terrorists have been named in Israeli and western documents as
being behind the planning and murder of Bernadotte. Chief among them is
Yitzhak Shamir (born Yezernitsky), who headed a Zionist terrorist
organization during the British occupation of Palestine known as LEHI,
or the Stern Gang.
New York Times columnist C.L. Sulzberger reported meeting two of
Shamir’s Stern Gang members on July 24, 1948. The Stern Gang terrorists
said: "We intend to kill Bernadotte and any other uniformed United
Nations observers who come to Jerusalem." Asked why, "They replied that
their organization was determined to seize all of Jerusalem for the state of
Israel and would brook no interference by any national or
international body."
Shamir, also reportedly sent two agents to
Egypt to assassinate the British minister Lord Moyne,
“because he was an enemy of the Jews and the Zionists.”
Shamir, however, never faced justice for the murder of Bernadotte and
went on to serve as Paris bureau chief the Israeli intelligence agency Mossad (1955–65), member
of the Israeli parliament (1973–96), and as prime minister of
Israel (1983–84
and 1986–92).
According to Michael Collins Piper, author of Final Judgment, Shamir is
also suspected of having played a key role in the assassination of U.S.
president John F. Kennedy by arranging a French-based hit squad of
assassins that killed the president, a foe of Israel's Ben Gurion and
strong opponent of Israel's nuclear ambitions.
Finis
Olof
Palme and Anna Lindh (1984)
|