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CRIME

Signs of violence found on frozen German babies

Autopsies found signs of violence on the bodies of two of the three dead babies found in a freezer in the basement of a German home, prosecutors said on Wednesday.

Signs of violence found on frozen German babies
A memorial outside the home in Wenden. Photo: DPA

One of the bodies showed clear indications of external trauma that could direct the course of the investigation. Those injuries were also likely the cause of death, prosecutor Johannes Daheim told reporters in the city of Olpe on Wednesday. The babies did not freeze to death, Daheim said.

Daheim said police did not want to release more information until the 44-year-old mother of the children could be questioned. She was put under psychiatric supervision after being taken into custody on Sunday and remains unfit for questioning, he said.

Two of the woman’s grown children found the three babies’ bodies wrapped in plastic bags underneath a stack of expired food in the basement freezer of the family’s rural home in Wenden, a town in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia.

The first baby autopsied on Tuesday showed no signs of violence, Daheim said. All three babies were born alive and without disabilities; one baby was slightly premature. Investigators are conducting genetic tests in coming days to confirm the woman’s 47-year-old husband was the father, police president Diethard Jungermann said.

Family and neighbors have said they had no idea the woman, who is overweight, was pregnant. The case is the latest in a series of grisly infanticides that have shocked Germany.

Sentence in other infanticide case

Another such incident came to an end on Wednesday, when a German court jailed a mother for nine months for manslaughter in the deaths of three newborn babies.

The court in the eastern city of Erfurt said the now 22-year-old woman gave birth to two healthy girls and a boy in 2002, 2004 and 2005 and then left them to die.

The defendant, whose name was not released by the court, had testified that the children were stillborn.

Defence attorneys pleaded for a suspended sentence of two years while state prosecutors called for a 10-year jail term.

The decomposed corpses of the three newborns were discovered in January 2007 at a property once belonging the defendant’s parents in the town of Thoerey.

The new owners of the property found the remains packed away in plastic bags and cardboard boxes in a garage.

In the most notorious case of child deaths in Germany in recent years, a woman was sentenced to 15 years in prison in 2006 for manslaughter of eight of her babies.

She had hid their remains in buckets and flower pots as well as in an old fish tank at her parents’ home.

Last November, a 35-year-old woman from Erfurt was sentenced to 12 years in jail for killing two of her babies and hiding their bodies in a freezer.

In December 2007, a woman was arrested after police found the bodies of five children aged between three and nine years in a house in Darry, near the northern city of Kiel.

The same week a woman was arrested in Plauen in eastern Germany on suspicion of killing three newborn babies she had borne. The infants were discovered in a trunk in the cellar, on the balcony and in a refrigerator.

Last Saturday, a dead baby was found in a ditch in the eastern state of Saxony.

The cases have prompted many hospitals to install so-called ‘Babyklappen,’ hatches for mothers to anonymously deposit infants for care when they believe they are unable to raise them themselves.

dpa/afp

CRIME

Teenager turns self in after attack on German politician

A 17-year-old has turned himself in to police in Germany after an attack on a lawmaker that the country's leaders decried as a threat to democracy.

Teenager turns self in after attack on German politician

The teenager reported to police in the eastern city of Dresden early Sunday morning and said he was “the perpetrator who had knocked down the SPD politician”, police said in a statement.

Matthias Ecke, 41, European parliament lawmaker for Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats (SPD), was set upon by four attackers as he put up EU election posters in Dresden on Friday night, according to police.

Ecke was “seriously injured” and required an operation after the attack, his party said.

Scholz on Saturday condemned the attack as a threat to democracy.

“We must never accept such acts of violence,” he said.

Ecke, who is head of the SPD’s European election list in the Saxony region, was just the latest political target to be attacked in Germany.

Police said a 28-year-old man putting up posters for the Greens had been “punched” and “kicked” earlier in the evening on the same Dresden street.

Last week two Greens deputies were abused while campaigning in Essen in western Germany and another was surrounded by dozens of demonstrators in her car in the east of the country.

According to provisional police figures, 2,790 crimes were committed against politicians in Germany in 2023, up from 1,806 the previous year, but less than the 2,840 recorded in 2021, when legislative elections took place.

A group of activists against the far right has called for demonstrations against the attack on Ecke in Dresden and Berlin on Sunday, Der Spiegel magazine said.

According to the Tagesspiegel newspaper, Interior Minister Nancy Faeser is planning to call a special conference with Germany’s regional interior ministers next week to address violence against politicians.

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