Gun Hellsvik

Swedish politician
Gun Hellsvik
Minister for Justice
In office
4 October 1991 – 7 October 1994
Prime MinisterCarl Bildt
Preceded byLaila Freivalds
Succeeded byLaila Freivalds
Personal details
Born
Gun Birgitta Blomgren

(1942-09-27)27 September 1942
Ängelholm, Sweden
Died14 November 2016(2016-11-14) (aged 74)
Political partyModerate
SpousePer Hellsvik (m. 1966)

Gun Birgitta Hellsvik (née Blomgren; 27 September 1942 – 14 November 2016) was a Swedish politician for the Moderate Party, who served as Minister for Justice from 1991-1994.

A lawyer by training, she worked as a civil law lecturer at Lund University before becoming a full-time politician.

She served as Municipal commissioner of Lund 1983-1991, Minister for Justice 1991-1994, member of the Riksdag, chairman of the Riksdag Committee on Justice 1994-2001, President of the Nordic Council 1999, Director General of the Swedish Patent and Registration Office 2001-2007, and chairman of the board of the University of Borås 2004-2007. Social Democrat Laila Freivalds was both her predecessor and successor to the office of Minister for Justice.

Hellsvik was known for her tough stance on drugs. She opposed dispensing clean needles to drug addicts, arguing that it would undermine people's confidence in the legal system. As Minister of Justice, she oversaw a legal change that made it a crime to be under the influence of an illicit drug, even in the absence of drug possession; she also authorised the police to forcibly obtain urine and blood samples from a suspected individual. She lauded the American war on drugs, claiming that "as so many times before, the United States, is showing us the right path". In a motion to parliament entitled "Strong measures against narcotics" (Krafttag mot narkotika;[1]) she supported lifetime imprisonment for narcotics crimes, allowing the police the take urine and blood samples from small children to promote early detection of drug abuse and to authorise the police to routinely induce vomiting in individuals suspected of having swallowed narcotics, among other things; the proposals were voted down by parliament.

Hellsvik died from cancer on 14 November 2016, at the age of 74.[2]

References

  1. ^ "Krafttag mot narkotika" [Strong measures against narcotics] (in Swedish). Riksdag. 1999-10-05. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 15 November 2016.
  2. ^ "Gun Hellsvik har avlidit". Dagens Nyheter (in Swedish). 15 November 2016.

Further reading

  • Gun Hellsvik at Svenskt kvinnobiografiskt lexikon
Preceded by Minister for Justice
1991–1994
Succeeded by
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Presidents of the Nordic Council
  1. Hans Hedtoft
  2. Einar Gerhardsen
  3. Nils Herlitz
  4. Erik Eriksen
  5. Lennart Heljas
  6. Nils Hønsvald
  7. Bertil Ohlin
  8. Gísli Jónsson
  9. Erik Eriksen
  10. Karl-August Fagerholm
  11. Nils Hønsvald
  12. Bertil Ohlin
  13. Sigurður Bjarnason
  14. Harald Nielsen
  15. Eino Sirén
  16. Svenn Stray
  17. Leif Cassel
  18. Matthías Á. Mathiesen
  19. Jens Otto Krag
  20. V. J. Sukselainen
  21. Kåre Willoch
  22. Johannes Antonsson
  23. Ragnhildur Helgadóttir
  24. Knud Enggaard
  25. V. J. Sukselainen
  26. Trygve Bratteli
  27. Olof Palme
  28. Matthías Á. Mathiesen
  29. Knud Enggaard
  30. Elsi Hetemäki-Olander
  31. Jo Benkow
  32. Karin Söder
  33. Páll Pétursson
  34. Anker Jørgensen
  35. Elsi Hetemäki-Olander
  36. Jan P. Syse
  37. Karin Söder
  38. Páll Pétursson
  39. Anker Jørgensen
  40. Ilkka Suominen
  41. Jan P. Syse
  42. Sten Andersson
  43. Per Olof Håkansson
  44. Geir Haarde
  45. Knud Enggaard
  46. Olof Salmén
  47. Berit Brørby Larsen
  48. Gun Hellsvik
  49. Sigríður Anna Þórðardóttir
  50. Svend Erik Hovmand
  51. Outi Ojala
  52. Inge Lønning
  53. Gabriel Romanus
  54. Rannveig Guðmundsdóttir
  55. Ole Stavad
  56. Dagfinn Høybråten
  57. Erkki Tuomioja
  58. Sinikka Bohlin
  59. Helgi Hjörvar
  60. Henrik Dam Kristensen
  61. Kimmo Sasi
  62. Marit Nybakk
  63. Karin Åström
  64. Hans Wallmark
  65. Höskuldur Þórhallsson
  66. Henrik Dam Kristensen
  67. Britt Lundberg
  68. Michael von Tetzschner
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