Sweden’s youngest ever cabinet minister, who came to the country as a
refugee from Bosnia, announced her resignation on Saturday after being
caught driving under the influence of alcohol.
Aida Hadzialic, 29,
minister for secondary and adult education, revealed that she had been
stopped by police in the southern city of Malmo and tests showed she had
an alcohol level of 0.2 grammes per litre of blood — just the level
considered an offence in Sweden.
“That was the biggest mistake of
my life… I will take responsibility. I announce my intention to resign
from my ministerial post,” an emotional Hadzialic told a press
conference at government headquarters in Stockholm.
“I understand
that a lot of people are disappointed in me. And I am angry with myself,
and certainly I deeply regret it,” added the young politician seen as
the future of the Social Democrat party.
Hadzialic was born in
Bosnia and immigrated to Sweden at the age of five, in 1992, with her
parents fleeing the war in the Balkans.
She
became involved in the Social Democrats youth movement in high school
and went on to be elected a municipal councillor at age 23.
Then in 2014 at 27 she became the youngest ever government minister in Sweden’s history.
She is not the only politician to have to drop out since Sweden’s political left returned to power two years ago.
Deputy
premier and environment minister Asa Romson from the Green party
resigned in May after a series of gaffes, the last being to describe the
2001 terrorist attacks in the United States as “the accidents of
September 11”.

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