A 47-year-old Swiss man shot and killed his 69-year-old neighbour with his hunting rifle on Saturday in Neirivue in central Switzerland.

"/> A 47-year-old Swiss man shot and killed his 69-year-old neighbour with his hunting rifle on Saturday in Neirivue in central Switzerland.

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Neighbours’ dispute ends in tragedy

A 47-year-old Swiss man shot and killed his 69-year-old neighbour with his hunting rifle on Saturday in Neirivue in central Switzerland.

Emergency services were powerless to help the victim after the younger man shot him in the face, newspaper Le Matin reports.

The assailant left the rifle at the crime scene and walked towards the centre of the village. He then called the police and was arrested shortly afterwards.

Initial investigations have shown that the two men, who lived next door to each other, began quarrelling on Saturday afternoon.

The 47-year-old man had received a notice of eviction from the owner of the flat where he had lived for a year. A police spokesman said the involvement of the victim in the future eviction of the assailant could have sparked the argument between the two.

Both men lived alone, although the 69-year-old was separated and had children.

The Neirivue episode is the latest in a series of deaths involving firearm to have taken place in Switzerland in the last few weeks. 

A 23-year-old man died on November 14th in Boudry, canton Neuchatel, after a friend of his pulled the trigger of his military rifle in the mistaken belief that it was an air gun.

Ten days earlier, in Saint Leonard, canton Vaud, another military weapon was used in the killing of a 21-year-old woman. Her 23-year-old boyfriend is in prison awaiting trial.

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Update: Cologne couple in court over ‘biological bomb plot’

A Tunisian man and his German wife went on trial Friday, charged with planning a foiled biological bomb attack in Germany with the deadly poison ricin.

Update: Cologne couple in court over 'biological bomb plot'
Special command officers leave the Cologne building where they discovered the rincin in June 2018. Photo: DPA

Sief Allah H., 30, and his wife Yasmin, 43, were arrested a year ago by an anti-terrorist squad that found 84 milligrams of the toxin in their Cologne apartment.

The arrests likely prevented what would have been Germany's first biological attack, said Holger Münch, head of the BKA Federal Criminal Police Office, at the time.

Federal prosecutors said the couple had “for a long time identified with the aims and values of the foreign terrorist organization Islamic State”.

SEE ALSO: Germany arrests wife in foiled 'biological attack' plot

They decided in 2017 to detonate an explosive in a large crowd, “to kill and wound the largest possible number of people,” said prosecutors ahead of the trial in Düsseldorf.

Chief prosecutor Verena Bauer told the court the couple had planned to build a bomb with ricin and steel balls, and that they had purchased “nearly all the required parts” for the explosive.

Lawyers for the defendants said the accused did not plan to make statements in court.

Sief Allah H.'s defence meanwhile filed a motion against judge Jan van Lessen, claiming bias.

Hamster test

The pair had allegedly researched various forms of explosives before deciding on the deadly poison.

They ordered 3,300 castor beans over the internet and successfully made a small amount of ricin, a poison 6,000 times more potent than cyanide that can kill if swallowed, inhaled or injected, according to prosecutors.

Investigators also found 250 metal balls, two bottles of nail polish remover as well as wires soldered on lightbulbs.

Only the raid and arrests prevented “the production of a larger quantity of ricin and the building of an explosive,” said prosecutors.

The couple were caught after a tip-off from the US Central Intelligence Agency, which had noticed the large online purchase of castor seeds, according to German media reports.

News weekly Der Spiegel has reported that the couple were believed to have already been radicalized when they met online in 2014.

Sief Allah H., a former street vendor and labourer in Tunisia, in 2015 married Yasmin H., an unemployed doctor's assistant and mother of seven children from four different fathers, the report said.

The husband had been in contact with radical Islamists and tried twice in 2017 to travel to Syria via Turkey.

His wife helped him with flight and hotel bookings, but both trips failed.

Sief Allah H. also volunteered to help the IS in their propaganda work, and did so in early 2018 by publishing material of the jihadist group online, said prosecutors.

SEE ALSO: Tunisian man held in Cologne 'sought to build biological weapon'

Later, the couple decided to prepare an attack in Germany itself, and also bought a hamster to test the potency of the ricin.

“Very concrete preparations had been made for an act with a … biological bomb, which is a first for Germany,” said Münch.

If convicted of the charges of serious violence endangering the country, the defendants could each face up to 15 years in jail.

Two suspects were also arrested in August last year in Tunisia in connection with the case.

Germany, Europe's biggest economy, remains on high alert after several deadly attacks claimed by the IS group.

The worst attack, a 2016 truck rampage through a Berlin Christmas market by Tunisian asylum seeker Anis Amri, claimed 12 lives.

The trial is expected to last until the end of August.

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