Oman Daily Observer

Sweden data scandal costs two ministers their jobs

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STOCKHOLM: Two Swedish ministers lost their jobs on Thursday over a huge leak of sensitive data that has rocked the fragile centreleft government.

But Prime Minister Stefan Lofven vowed he would be staying on despite speculatio­n he could call a snap election.

Interior Minister Anders Ygeman, a political heavyweigh­t previously seen as a likely future prime minister, has resigned, Lofven said at a press conference, adding that Infrastruc­ture Minister Anna Johansson will also step down.

Ygeman reportedly knew about the leak from the national transport agency, which made the private data of millions of citizens accessible abroad, but failed to tell the prime minister.

The scandal has blown up in recent weeks after it emerged that an entire database on Swedish drivers’ licenses was made available to technician­s in the Czech Republic and Romania, with media reporting that the identities of intelligen­ce agents may have been jeopardise­d.

Lofven’s Social Democrat-led minority government has been badly rattled by one of Sweden’s largest data breaches in decades, and opposition parties had threatened the coalition with a vote of no confidence.

Some political commentato­rs had expected Lofven to call an early election at Thursday’s press conference — but he insisted said he intends to serve his full term, which ends in 2018.

“I have no intention of plunging Sweden into a political crisis,” he said, pointing to “formidable challenges” the country is facing including tensions in the Baltic region, Brexit as well as the government’s plans for social and economic reforms. “I looked at several alternativ­es, and I chose the best one for the country,” Lofven said.

The data leak stems from the Swedish transport agency’s hiring of IBM in 2015 to take over its IT operations. IBM in turn used subcontrac­tors in the Czech Republic and Romania — making the sensitive informatio­n accessible by foreign technician­s who did not have security clearance.

The Swedish military said informatio­n on its personnel, vehicles as well as defence and contingenc­y planning could have been included in the leak, although the transport agency denied having a register on military vehicles and said there was no indication the data had been “spread in an improper way”.

Swedish Defence Minister Peter Hultqvist kept his job in the reshuffle despite facing claims that, like the interior minister, he knew about the scandal but failed to tell the premier.

 ?? — AFP ?? (L-R) Sweden’s Minister for Infrastruc­ture Tomas Eneroth, Minister for Migration, Helene Fritzon, Minister of Defence Peter Hultqvist and Prime Minister Stefan Lofven attend a press conference in Stockholm on Thursday.
— AFP (L-R) Sweden’s Minister for Infrastruc­ture Tomas Eneroth, Minister for Migration, Helene Fritzon, Minister of Defence Peter Hultqvist and Prime Minister Stefan Lofven attend a press conference in Stockholm on Thursday.
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