A newlywed Swiss woman from Basel who killed her husband in a tragic gun accident in March has been convicted of involuntary manslaughter but will not serve a prison sentence.

"/> A newlywed Swiss woman from Basel who killed her husband in a tragic gun accident in March has been convicted of involuntary manslaughter but will not serve a prison sentence.

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Bride who shot husband ‘thought it was a blank’

A newlywed Swiss woman from Basel who killed her husband in a tragic gun accident in March has been convicted of involuntary manslaughter but will not serve a prison sentence.

32-year old “Nadia N“ was handed a nine-month suspended sentence by Basel Criminal Court on Wednesday, Blick newspaper reported. 

The woman cried as she told the court the accident happened while playing with her husband Victor’s gun at their home in the Gundeli area, south of Basel city centre, on Sunday March 20th. She explained she did not know it was loaded.

Although they first met in 1996, the home care assistant and her musician husband did not marry until the beginning of March 2011.

The tragedy occurred in their house two weeks later while their 13-year old son was staying with a friend.

Her husband was always handling his gun, the woman told the court. Even on the day before the deadly shot was fired, he polished his weapon while sitting in front of the TV and smoking a joint.

Nadia N. told her husband she wanted to fetch the family register from the safe. Victor’s gun, a Glock 17-caliber 9x19mm automatic, was also locked up there.

“As I opened the safe, he called saying he wanted the gun,“ she said. “I wanted to pretend I wasn’t afraid.“

Play-acting, she told the court she held the gun to her 35-year old husband’s temple. “Hands up“, she joked.

Her husband, not believing the gun to be loaded, urged her to pull the trigger. When she eventually did, the gun went off and her husband slumped to the floor. She called an ambulance but he was dead before it arrived.

She was held in police custody for two nights but investigators soon came to conclusion that her husband may have loaded the gun with a real bullet rather than a blank while under the influence of marijuana.

The judge found Nadia N. guilty of involuntary manslaughter, but reasoned that “the consequences of what happened are so heavy that an exemption of punishment is justified.“

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Former French secret agent found shot dead in Alps car park

A former French secret agent was shot five times, including in the heart and head, in a car park in the Alps, his lawyer has said.

Former French secret agent found shot dead in Alps car park
The crime took place in the small town of Ballaison, close to the Swiss border. Photo: Google maps

Daniel Forestier, 57, who lived in the Alps region in eastern France, was found dead last Thursday in a remote car park in the small town of Ballaison, near lake Geneva. 

He had been shot five times, including in the head and heart, his lawyer Cedric Huissoud told AFP.

Forestier and another former agent from France's external intelligence service, the DGSE, were charged last September with “criminal conspiracy” and “possession of explosives” in connection with a plot to murder the Congolese general Ferdinand Mbaou, who has lived in exile in France for some 20 years.

Congolese general Ferdinand Mbaou has lived in exile in France for 20 years. Photo: AFP

Forestier is believed to have worked for 14 years for the DGSE. He was living in the small town of Lucinges, near the Swiss border, where he had served on the town council and ran a cafe.

In October, Mbaou told AFP he was angry at the reported plot, but “not surprised”.

Like a number of France-based opponents of Republic of Congo's President  Denis Sassou Nguesso, Mbaou believes he was targeted for criticising one of Africa's longest-serving leaders from what he thought to be a safe distance. 

The 62-year-old general is known for his outspoken attacks on Sassou Nguesso, who has ruled the former French colony and oil-rich central African country of 4.5 million people for some 35 years.

Mbaou fled Congo after his former boss, the country's first democratically-elected president Pascal Lissouba, was overthrown by Sassou Nguesso in 1997.

He had already survived an attempt on his life.   

Mbaou believes it was the regime that sent hitmen to shoot him in the back as he was leaving his home in Bessancourt north of Paris in November 2015. 

He still has the bullet lodged in his torso. 

“The doctors couldn't remove it because it is in a tricky spot, close to the heart,” he told AFP.

No one was ever charged over the attack.

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