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Babysitting free for all exposes children: report

Since Sweden's household services tax relief (RUT-avdrag) came in to effect, the babysitting business in the country has boomed.

But an investigation carried out by the Svenska Dagbladet (SvD) daily showed an alarming lack of safeguards against who can tout their trade on the internet.

“There is no control of this industry. Today virtually anyone can call themselves a babysitter. They just advertise on the internet,“ Björn Sellström, head of the police child pornography unit, told the newspaper.

The situation is in stark contrast to the Swedish childcare and pre-school industry which is heavily regulated. Background checks are carried out prior to the hiring of anyone working with children in Sweden.

But today there are no such safeguards regulating the babysitting business.

SvD’s investigation showed that a man who was convicted of sexual abuse continued to look for work as a babysitter and even started his own babysitting business.

This in itself is not enough for the police to intervene. The intent would be almost impossible to prove.

“A case like that would never lead to prosecution, despite someone fooling parents that he is the world’s best babysitter,“ Sellström told SvD.

It is down to the websites security personnel and parents to discern who is a bona fide child minder and who isn’t.

The household services tax relief provides tax breaks resulting in households saving up to 50 percent on a range of services including babysitting and cleaning.

According to SvD, 149 cases of child abuse have been reported to the police in Gothenburg and Stockholm since the tax relief was put into effect.

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R

Former Paris deputy mayor ‘charged with rape’, say sources

A former deputy mayor of Paris accused of sexual harassment by a co-worker was charged on Friday with rape and other sexual assaults, several sources said.

Former Paris deputy mayor 'charged with rape', say sources
Pierre Aidenbaum stands behind Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo at a silent march in honour of a murdered Jewish woman. Photo: Francois Guillot/AFP
Pierre Aidenbaum, 78, stepped down as deputy mayor last month just weeks after another deputy mayor quit due to protests over his links to a known paedophile.
   
He was questioned by a judge on Friday and charged, a source close to the case who refused to be named told AFP.
   
A judicial source, who also wished to remain anonymous, added Aidenbaum had been banned from contacting any victim or witness, and cannot show up at city hall.
   
His lawyer Maud Touitou told AFP Aidenbaum had been “hit hard” by the accusations against him “and the suffering expressed”.
 
   
 
Aidenbaum's resignation last month came after another deputy to Mayor Anne Hidalgo, Christophe Girard, quit in July.
   
Opposition politicians and women's groups had demanded his suspension over ties to Gabriel Matzneff, a writer who has never hidden his preference for sex with adolescent girls and boys.
   
Girard has since himself been accused of sexually abusing a minor in a New York Times report he has vehemently denied.
   
Aidenbaum remains on the city council despite his resignation as deputy mayor, but on Friday Hidalgo asked him to give up his seat “immediately”.
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