SHARE
COPY LINK

CRIME

Man throws three kids and self from window

A young German father threw his three children out of a second-floor window before jumping out himself on Tuesday, in what police believe was a bid to get his girlfriend back. Their ten-month-old son was left fighting for his life.

Man throws three kids and self from window
Photo: DPA

The 30-year-old man from Treuchtlingen, Bavaria, threw his two- and three-year-old daughters and even younger son out of a the window at around 10pm, a few days after the mother of the children left him.

The two little girls survived the seven-metre drop with serious injuries, but their baby brother was much more badly hurt and was said on Wednesday to be in a critical condition.

A neighbour told the police that she saw one of the children fall out of the window still holding a paper plane. The little boy, she said, fell like a stone to the ground.

The man jumped out of the window himself as the police watched on, and was also injured, despite landing on grass and bushes below.  

His 22-year-old former partner, mother of the children, had left him not long previously, and was staying with her sister in the neighbouring state of Baden Württemberg.

She called the police on Tuesday, concerned that he might put the three children in danger after they had an argument on the phone.

A police spokesman from nearby Nuremberg said they believed that by throwing them out of the window and jumping himself “he was trying to get her to come back,” in a statement.

By the time the police arrived it was too late: “as we were having a look at what was going on, he threw the children out,” said the spokesman.

Shortly after the incident, two police helicopters and an ambulance came to take the man and his children to hospital.

The father was not as badly injured as his children and is due to be released from hospital on Wednesday.

Both he and the mother had been reportedly unemployed for a long time and had been struggling financially. A neighbour told the police that they barely ever made contact with those living around them.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

FAMILY

‘Multiple crises’: Why fewer babies are being born in Germany

The birth rate in Germany has fallen significantly over the past two years, according to a study published on Wednesday.

'Multiple crises': Why fewer babies are being born in Germany

The birth rate has fallen from 1.57 children per woman in 2021 to around 1.36 in the autumn of 2023. 

This means that the fertility level is the lowest it has been since 2009, according to figures from a joint publication by the Federal Institute and Stockholm University in the European Journal of Population. 

Decline was ‘unusually’ rapid

The birth rate in Germany initially remained stable and even went up slightly during the Covid pandemic. 

In 2021, the highest birth rate since 1997 was registered with 795,492 babies, a phenomenon which many in Germany dubbed “corona babies” since they were conceived and born amid the pandemic.

But the figure then fell to 1.4 from January 2022 as the crisis continued and then recovered at 1.5 children per woman in the summer of 2022. The birth rate then fell again in 2023 and, according to initial estimates, averaged 1.36 from January to November.

READ ALSO: Germany records lowest number of babies born in a decade

“The sharp decline in fertility observed within two years is therefore unusual, as phases of falling birth rates have tended to be slower in the past,” the researchers said. 

There could be various reasons for the decline: According to the study, the abrupt drop in numbers may have to do with the start of the Covid vaccination campaign nine months earlier. 

It’s possible  that many women postponed having children because the vaccines were not approved for pregnant women at the time in order to get vaccinated first, said the researchers.

But why did the number of births fall from autumn 2022, when the vaccine was widely available to everyone in Germany?

“In addition to the pandemic, the war in Ukraine, rising inflation and advancing climate change have made people feel insecure,” said co-author Martin Bujard.

“In such a time of multiple crises, many do not carry out their desire to have children.” 

Part of a larger trend?

Whether the current figures herald a general trend towards falling birth rates in Germany or merely reflect a temporary effect is not yet foreseeable, said the researchers.

The birth rate in Germany fluctuated between 1.2 and 1.4 children per woman for four decades after 1975 and was among the lowest in Europe for a long time, according to the institute. 

From 2015 to 2021, it was then significantly higher with 1.5 to 1.6 children per woman.

READ ALSO: Everything you need to know about having a baby in Germany

SHOW COMMENTS