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LIBEL

Lindh murder suspect sues newspaper for defamation

A libel case involving Swedish newspaper Sydsvenskan and the initial suspect in the murder of Swedish foreign minister Anna Lindh in 2002 opened in a Malmö court on Wednesday.

The man who was first suspected and arrested in relation to the stabbing and murder of Anna Lindh, known in the media as the “35-year-old”, is suing the southern Swedish newspaper for defamation.

The man was held for a week while police conducted their investigations and was thus subjected to extensive scrutiny in the media.

The man pressed charges against Sydsvenskan and a slew of other newspapers for their reporting of him, arguing that he was presented as a reprehensible person and a criminal and that the publication of certain personal details meant he was easily identifiable.

The case against the Skåne-based newspaper is the first to come to court.

“Our news coverage was completely normal,” publisher Hans Månsson told news agency TT last week.

The newspaper and Hans Månsson deny the charges of aggravated defamation, a crime which can result in a large fine or prison for up to two years.

“One has to remember that the country’s foreign minister had been murdered. If you have the bad luck to be arrested and detained as a suspect then you have to expect the misfortune to be written about,” Månsson told TT.

The man is demanding 250,000 kronor ($34,610) in damages from the newspaper.

The case is expected to continue for two days at Malmö District Court. As the case concerns the freedom of the press, a nine-person jury will pass judgement.

The 35-year-old has since received 150,000 in damages from the Swedish state for the time spent in custody.

Anna Lindh died in the early hours of September 11th 2003 from stab wounds sustained after an attack in the Nordiska Kompaniet department store in central Stockholm the previous afternoon.

Mijailo Mijailovic was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment for her murder in March 2004.

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FARMING

Germany allows slaughter of male chicks to continue

Germany's top administrative court ruled Thursday that the slaughtering of male chicks may continue in the poultry industry until a method is found to determine the sex of an embryo in the egg.

Germany allows slaughter of male chicks to continue
Photo: DPA

According to the Federal Ministry of Agriculture around 45 million male chicks are slaughtered in Germany each year.

The killings are highly controversial and opposed by Agriculture Minister Julia Klöckner in Angela Merkel's government.

“Chick killing is ethically unacceptable and must be stopped as soon as possible,” Klöckner told daily Rheinische Post, adding that €8 million had been allocated to help find alternatives.

Several methods for the testing of a chick embryo's sex — which would allow the destruction of eggs before hatching — are being tested, but not yet ready for use on an industrial scale.

SEE ALSO: Keep shredding male chicks, court tells farms 

On Thursday, Leipzig's Federal Administrative court decided the killing of male chicks is in accordance with the first article of the Animal Protection Act, which stipulates “no one is entitled to inflict pain, suffering or damage on animals without reasonable cause”.

Judge Renate Philipp said there were “reasonable grounds” for the current practise to continue “until methods to determine sex in the egg” are ready.

Young male hatchlings are usually condemned to a violent end simply because of their sex, as roosters are deemed largely useless in the world of livestock farming.

In many cases, they are mechanically shredded, gassed or crushed to death and used as animal feed.

Just as in the two previous cases, the court in Leipzig ruled that the economic interests of the egg industry took precedent in the immediate future.

The dispute dates back to 2013 when the state of North Rhine-Westphalia outlawed the killing of male chicks under the Animal Protection Act.

However, two hatcheries challenged the decision at district level, which took the matter up to federal court.

The Central Association of the German Poultry Industry (ZDG) has warned against hastily banning the killing of male chicks.

The industry also wants to end the unethical killings, said association president Friedrich-Otto Ripke, but a mass method of identifying sex in the egg had to be found first.

The German Animal Welfare Association reacted with disappointment to Thursday's decision.

“We would have wished for an immediate ban,” said president Thomas Schröder, who criticized the court for not setting a deadline for when the killing should be banned.

Consumer organization Foodwatch said the basic problem remains “that the chickens are either bred for egg producing or fattening up on a massive scale”.

The industry wants to “get out of chick killing today rather than tomorrow, but without practical alternatives this would not work,” he said.

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