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ANNA LINDH

Anna Lindh’s care to be reviewed: agency

Sweden's National Board of Health and Welfare (Socialstyrelsen) will review the care former foreign minister Anna Lindh received after she was stabbed in central Stockholm in September 2003.

Anna Lindh's care to be reviewed: agency

“The National Board of Health and Welfare will probe the care of former foreign minister Anna Lindh,” the board said in a statement.

It pointed out that it did not normally re-examine cases older than two years, but that it would make an exception due to the huge public interest in the case.

“The case is of great public interest and has to do with how care worked in a situation where the foreign minister was the victim of an attack,” board general director Lars-Erik Holm said in the statement.

“I have turned to the other general directors of corresponding authorities in the Nordic countries to get their help in appointing experts,” he added.

Stockholm’s Karolinska University Hospital last month requested that the board analyse Lindh’s treatment, saying it wanted an independent review after commercial broadcast TV4 charged in a news programme that she may have been saved with better care.

Hospital spokesman Klas Österman insisted at the time, “We have not seen any signs, then or now, to indicate that we made any mistakes.”

Lindh was stabbed repeatedly in the arms, chest and abdomen by a man with a history of psychiatric problems as she shopped at the upmarket NK department store in Stockholm without a bodyguard on September 10th, 2003. She died of massive internal bleeding some 13 hours later in the early hours of September 11th.

The board’s decision comes three days after the broadcast of TV4’s “Cold Facts” (Kalla Fakta) programme on Lindh’s treatment.

The half-hour show featured a detailed presentation of the treatment she received from the moment she arrived at the hospital, through an eight-hour operation during which she received up to 50 litres of blood, until she was pronounced dead at 5.29am on September 11th.

An unnamed Swedish expert, whose face was blurred onscreen, said the hospital could have used better methods to stop the minister’s bleeding from the abdomen, notably by using the so-called “damage control” operation method.

The programme also interviewed Dr. Donald Trunkey, an expert trauma surgeon at Oregon’s Health and Science University, who described the rush to operate Lindh without first slowing the bleeding “futile.”

“In the United States, if somebody did that in my hospital, I would call [such an eight-hour operation] foolhardy. I mean, you are not going to win,” he said, adding the lengthy operation may have worsend her condition.

“I would have classified her as a preventable death,” he said.

Eva Franchell, who was shopping with Lindh when she was attacked, said she was pleased an investigation would be launched.

“It opens up old wounds, of course, but I feel the rumours that have been spread around have been very unpleasant. That is why I think it is good that this can all be ended,” she told the TT news agency.

Lindh’s killer Mijailo Mijailovic, now 32, is serving a life sentence for the murder.

The killing of the 46-year-old mother of two young boys sent a shock wave around Sweden, bringing back painful memories of the still-unsolved 1986 assassination of prime minister Olof Palme.

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ANNA LINDH

Anna Lindh killer guilty of prison assault

Mijailo Mijailovic, convicted of the murder of Swedish foreign minister Anna Lindh in 2003, has been convicted for a 2011 unprovoked attack on a fellow prison inmate.

Anna Lindh killer guilty of prison assault

“He stabbed him several times, just like he did Anna Lindh. Two of the blows hit the abdomen and damaged the liver,” a source revealed to newspaper Aftonbladet.

Mijailovic was sentenced to life in prison in December of 2004 for stabbing Lindh while she was shopping at the NK department store in central Stockholm.

While Lindh survived the initial attack, doctors were unable to stop the bleeding caused by the injuries and she died early the next morning.

Since the killing, Mijailovic has committed several violent crimes while in prison.

In 2005, he assaulted a fellow inmate at the forensic psychiatry clinic in Sundsvall in northern Sweden.

According to Aftonbladet, the latest incident occurred in December 2011.

Mijailovic suddenly attacked a 21-year-old fellow inmate with a screwdriver and stabbed him several times in the stomach and the chest. The incident occurred in a corridor in Kumla prison, where both were serving their sentences.

Mijailovic didn’t want to talk about the attack during the trial but according to Aftonbladet he confessed in interrogation:

“The motive of the stabbing is that X is bitching about me. I felt bad. He doesn’t have to say that I am sick. It is unnecessary. If I was sick I wouldn’t be in prison. Then they would have convicted me to psychiatric care,” he reportedly said.

Mijailovic also told officers that he had been looking for a knife but couldn’t find one.

“I took the screwdriver from the tool rack on the wall. It was a flat headed one, about 10 centimetres long,” Mijailovic said when questioned, according to the paper.

The victim sustained injuries from three stab wounds, including a damaged liver.

According to Aftonbladet, he said in questioning that he had tried to defend himself but had failed.

“Best thing would have been if he had died,” Mijailovic said, according to the paper.

Mijailovic was convicted of aggravated assault by the district court on Monday.

TT/Rebecca Martin

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