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PAEDOPHILE

Swiss police snare chat room paedophile

Posing as a 13-year-old girl, Zug police have caught a paedophile at work in an internet chat room.

Having created a profile for a fictitious 13-year-old girl, the police began to chat with the man over a three-week period, online news website 20 Minutes reported.

Finally the man arranged to meet the “girl” in Zug’s old town on Tuesday. Instead, he found the police authorities waiting for him there.

“The defendant expressed a desire to engage in sexual activity with the fictitious girl,” a police officer told 20 Minutes.

When interviewed, the man could not deny that he had had sexual intentions in his interaction with the girl.

Internet chat-rooms are a known haven for paedophiles. According to experts, it can take less than two minutes of chatting in such a space before coming into contact with a sexually motivated adult.

The use of undercover agents has only recently been permitted in Zug after a loophole in the law was finally closed in October 2011. The canton now has two dedicated officers working on the networks.

“Canton Zug closed the loophole very quickly,” said Christian Democratic Party member of parliament Barbara Schmid-Federer.

“Other cantons should follow suit.”

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ABUSE

Catholic church in Valais rocked by new sex abuse claims

Accusations of historic sexual abuse have been made against around ten Catholic priests in the bishopric of Sion in the canton of Valais.

Catholic church in Valais rocked by new sex abuse claims
Photo: lightpoet/Depositphotos

The bishop of Sion, Jean-Marie Lovey, has asked the victims for forgiveness, the Swiss news agency SDA reported, quoting Radio Rhône FM.

It said the abuse of children and young people happened between the 1950s and 1990s, and all the cases were now too old for a prosecution to take place.

The paedophile priests were identified after some ten victims went to the diocese of Sion with abuse allegations last year.

Three of the accused clergymen are still alive.

One of the victims told the radio the numbers of reported abuse cases did not correspond to the reality.

He said he had met around 50 other victims in Valais, many of whom did not want to talk about what they had experienced.

The man accused the church of a cover-up, saying previous bishops had known about the sexual abuse but had done nothing except move some priests to other parishes.

But Bishop Lovey, who was appointed by Pope Francis in 2014, denied there had been an attempt to cover up the abuse.

He said priests were moved to other parishes as a preventive measure.

Between 2010 and 2016, around 220 victims informed the Swiss church authorities of abuse by ordained clergy between 1950 and 1990, SDA said.

The latest cases in Valais will be included in the church’s statistics for 2017, which have not yet been published.

In February 2017 the Swiss Bishops Conference set up a commission charged with awarding compensation to victims of historic sex abuse by Swiss priests.

The leading church authority announced it had created a 500,000 franc reparations fund to pay compensation to victims who no longer have the right to seek redress in court since the statute of limitations has passed.