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CRIME

Samurai sword killer flees hospital

Police are searching for a psychiatric patient who killed a woman in a church with a samurai sword and has subsequently run away during an excursion from a Baden-Württemberg hospital, media reported Wednesday.

Samurai sword killer flees hospital
The church where the rampage occurred. Photo: DPA

Ranjithakumar Vallipuram, now 30, killed one woman and seriously injured three other worshippers in 2005 during a rampage with a samurai sword and a knife at the Christ Church Zuffenhausen, on the northern outskirts of Stuttgart. The victims were members of the local Tamil community.

Vallipuram, a Tamil from Sri Lanka, has fled from a psychiatric hospital in Bad Schussenried to which he was committed by a Stuttgart court that found he could not be tried because he was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia.

He left on an unaccompanied outing on Saturday morning and did not return, daily Stuttgarter Zeitung reported.

“That is not good news,” a member of the Tamil community told the paper.

The hospital’s medical director, Heiner Missenhardt, said Vallipuram did not pose an acute danger because the symptoms of his mental illness “completely faded away” some time ago. The outing from the hospital had been approved, Missenhardt said.

He had one week’s worth of schizophrenia drugs with him when he left the hospital. But without the medication, it was possible that his symptoms would return, Missenhardt said.

He had been permitted unaccompanied outings from the hospital for the past year-and-a-half.

He is described as 1.79 metres tall, dark-skinned with black hair, dark eyes and a beard. At the time of his escape, he was wearing a green cargo jacket, blue jeans and black cap.

The police suspect he may have run away out of fear of being deported.

Missenhardt told the Stuttgarter Zeitung: “There was no deportation order, just an assessment by his lawyer that it soon could come to that.”

Vallipuram’s application for political asylum had been rejected before he carried out the rampage.

The Local/djw

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POLITICS

Germany raids properties in bribery probe aimed at AfD politician

German officials said on Thursday they had raided properties as part of a bribery probe into an MP, who media say is a far-right AfD lawmaker accused of spreading Russian propaganda.

Germany raids properties in bribery probe aimed at AfD politician

The investigation targets Petr Bystron, the number-two candidate for the Alternative for Germany (AfD) party in next month’s European Parliament elections, Der Spiegel news outlet reported.

Police, and prosecutors in Munich, confirmed on Thursday they were conducting “a preliminary investigation against a member of the German Bundestag on the initial suspicion of bribery of elected officials and money laundering”, without giving a name.

Properties in Berlin, the southern state of Bavaria and the Spanish island of Mallorca were searched and evidence seized, they said in a statement.

About 70 police officers and 11 prosecutors were involved in the searches.

Last month, Bystron denied media reports that he was paid to spread pro-Russian views on a Moscow-financed news website, just one of several scandals that the extreme-right anti-immigration AfD is battling.

READ ALSO: How spying scandal has rocked troubled German far-right party

Bystron’s offices in the German parliament, the Bundestag, were searched after lawmakers voted to waive the immunity usually granted to MPs, his party said.

The allegations against Bystron surfaced in March when the Czech government revealed it had bust a Moscow-financed network that was using the Prague-based Voice of Europe news site to spread Russian propaganda across Europe.

Did AfD politicians receive Russian money?

Czech daily Denik N said some European politicians cooperating with the news site were paid from Russian funds, in some cases to fund their European Parliament election campaigns.

It singled out the AfD as being involved.

Denik N and Der Spiegel named Bystron and Maximilian Krah, the AfD’s top candidate for the European elections, as suspects in the case.

After the allegations emerged, Bystron said that he had “not accepted any money to advocate pro-Russian positions”.

Krah has denied receiving money for being interviewed by the site.

On Wednesday, the European Union agreed to impose a broadcast ban on the Voice of Europe, diplomats said.

The AfD’s popularity surged last year, when it capitalised on discontent in Germany at rising immigration and a weak economy, but it has dropped back in the face of recent scandals.

As well as the Russian propaganda allegations, the party has faced a Chinese spying controversy and accusations that it discussed the idea of mass deportations with extremists, prompting a wave of protests across Germany.

READ ALSO: Germany, Czech Republic accuse Russia of cyberattacks

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