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Post by Admin on Mar 10, 2014 0:36:54 GMT
Eva Louise Rausing was a businesswoman and philanthropist, and a member of the Rausing family, which owns the food packaging business Tetra Pak.
In 2008, Rausing and her husband faced drugs charges after she was caught trying to smuggle drugs into the US embassy in London, and hard drugs were subsequently found at their home. Amazingly, she was also a patron of a number of anti drugs charities.
Gunnar Wall, a Swedish author who has written two books on the Olof Palme killing, said that Rausing had contacted him in June 2011, claiming that she had learned that Palme had been killed by a Swedish businessman, who feared that Palme was a threat to his business.
Wall had conducted an e-mail correspondence with Rausing, who told him that she had written to the businessman on three occasions about the allegations. In one e-mail to Wall she wrote: "Don't forget to investigate if I should suddenly die! Just joking, I hope."
On 10 July 2012, she was found dead at her home in Belgravia, London.
Her 49-year-old husband, Hans Kristian Rausing, had been stopped for drink driving and the police decided to search their home, leading to the discovery of her body.
He was arrested in connection with her death.
He was charged with delaying the burial of her body. He pled guilty, and was sentenced to only ten months' imprisonment, suspended for two years.
Gunnar Wall told the Guardian: "When her e-mails stopped, I did not think too much about it, until I heard that she had died in circumstances that were unclear."
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Post by Admin on Dec 29, 2014 23:28:54 GMT
Did Kurd Rebels Kill Olof Palme?
A Kurdish rebel commander says his guerrillas assassinated Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme in 1986 in retaliation for Sweden's extradition of Kurdish rebels, a Turkish newspaper reported Tuesday.
The allegation was the latest in a string of reported claims by Semdin Sakik, the second-in-charge of a Kurdish rebel group, the Kurdistan Workers' Party, since his abduction earlier this month by Turkish troops in northern Iraq.
The Istanbul daily Sabah reported that the party's leader Abdullah Ocalan, ordered Palme's killing after Sweden decided to extradite eight rebels in the Workers' Party, known as the PKK. Ocalan was also angered that Sweden granted his wife asylum after she defected from the PKK, it said.
The group rejected the claim Tuesday, however, and spoke of a Turkish plot to discredit the rebel organization, the German-based pro-Kurdish news agency DEM said.
"Such dirty accusations directed at the PKK for years have proven to be untrue," DEM quoted a rebel spokesman in Sweden.
Palme was killed while walking home from a movie theater with his wife in downtown Stockholm. Christer Pettersson was convicted of the killing, but the verdict was overturned by a higher court on grounds of insufficient evidence.
Sweden's supreme court is considering a motion to retry Pettersson.
Sakik reportedly said Palme's murderer escaped to France after the attack. Turkish authorities are investigating his claims, Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit told reporters Tuesday.
Sakik's alleged testimony was not the first time the PKK has been implicated in the Palme killing. Sweden had incurred the wrath of Kurdish militants in the early 1980s when its government branded the PKK a "terrorist organization."
Prosecutor Jan Danielsson, who leads Sweden's investigation in the Palme killing, told the Swedish paper Aftonbladet that authorities would wait for a report by Swedish diplomat Katarina Berggren, who was briefed by Turkish authorities Tuesday.
"There is a strong indication that the Turkish side is trying to discredit the PKK," the newspaper quoted Danielsson as saying.
Several other theories have emerged surrounding the Palme murder.
In 1996, a South African police official testifying on apartheid-era crimes implicated agents of the previous regime.
Sakik commanded PKK operations inside Turkey and is accused of having masterminded a fatal attack on 33 soldiers in 1993.
Since his abduction, Sakik has also reportedly claimed that several Turkish journalists, businessmen, politicians and human rights activists had links to the PKK. The accused have denied the claims.
Nearly 37,000 people have been killed in the Turkish-Kurdish war since 1984, when the PKK launched its armed campaign for autonomy in the country's southeast.
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