Yahoo – AFP, Gaël Branchereau, January 15, 2016
Stockholm
(AFP) - The unusually frank approach of Sweden's foreign minister has seen fans
send her flowers over her biting criticism of Saudi Arabia -- and now prompted
Israel to declare her persona non grata.
Declared
unwelcome by authorities in the Jewish state on Wednesday thanks to a raft of
critical comments, Margot Wallstrom has made a name for herself as a vocal
feminist and fierce defender of human rights.
The
61-year-old Social Democrat is the undisputed star of her government, but
critics wonder whether her tendency to speak her mind -- not a quality
traditionally found in diplomats -- is good for the country.
She has
repeatedly enraged Israel, starting with Sweden's recognition of a Palestinian
state shortly after she became foreign minister in October 2014.
In the wake
of November's terror attacks in Paris, she identified the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict as one of the factors explaining why "there are so many people
who have become radicalised" -- comments Israel called "appallingly
impudent".
And in
December, she called on Israel to halt what she called "extrajudicial
executions" in response to attacks by knife-wielding Palestinians,
following up with a demand the next month for "thorough"
investigations into the killing of Palestinians by the Israeli army.
Firmly
signalling that Wallstrom needn't book any trips to Israel in the near future,
the country's deputy foreign minister Tzipi Hotovely blasted her comments as
"a mix of blindness and political stupidity".
Swedish
critics have also questioned the wisdom of her diplomatic strategy.
"The
political actions of Margot Wallstrom are marked by controversy," said
liberal commentator Lars Kriss, arguing that her anti-Israel offensive borders
on "an obsession" and questioning whether she is "an asset"
to Sweden.
"Margot
Wallstrom has already made trouble with her habit of thinking aloud,"
wrote financial newspaper Dagens Industri.
"She
is beginning to become a problem."
Rocking
the boat
Wallstrom
defends her approach, pointing to the huge number of people who sent her
flowers after she lashed Saudi Arabia for human rights abuses in frank terms
that other Western foreign ministers might have avoided in dealing with the
oil-rich state.
"People
long for those who stand up for their values," she told the Financial
Times in September.
Last March,
Riyadh recalled its ambassador to Stockholm, accusing Sweden of "flagrant
interference" in its affairs after Wallstrom told parliament the country
was a "dictatorship" that violated women's rights and whipped
bloggers.
And around
the same time, Sweden unilaterally cancelled a long-standing military
cooperation deal between the two countries.
Saudi
Arabia proceeded to freeze Swedish business visas to the Gulf kingdom -- but
with Stockholm fearing the financial impact, Saudi business leaders were
invited for talks, and the two countries have now normalised ties.
Wallstrom
has also found time to condemn the "reign of terror" of Russian
President Vladimir Putin.
Handed the
foreign policy portfolio by Prime Minister Stefan Lofven -- a former
metalworker well aware of his own inexperience on the international stage --
Wallstrom has come a long way for someone who started out as a lowly bank clerk
in the provinces.
Born in
northern Sweden, she became an activist in the 1970s in the solidly
left-leaning western province of Varmland, entering parliament at the age of
25.
After a
series of ministerial roles she headed to Brussels to become EU environment
commissioner in 1999, then the EU Commission's vice-president in 2004.
She has
spoken out tirelessly against the under-representation of women in politics,
with UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon naming her special envoy on Sexual
Violence in Conflict in 2010.
And with
her country struggling to cope with a huge migrant influx, she cried on
television last September when commenting on the fate of Aylan Kurdi, the
Syrian toddler whose photo became a heartbreaking symbol of the refugee crisis
when his body washed up on a Turkish beach.
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