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CRIME

Guatemalan police chief in Geneva murder trial

Guatemala's former police chief Erwin Sperisen went on trial on Thursday in Switzerland on charges of having planned and taken part in the murder of 10 prisoners in the Central American country.

Guatemalan police chief in Geneva murder trial
Photto: Wikimedia Commons

Sperisen, 43, holds both Swiss and Guatemalan citizenship and therefore cannot be extradited from Switzerland to stand trial in his homeland.
   
But under Swiss law, any citizen of the Alpine country can be tried at home for alleged crimes committed abroad.
   
Sperisen is accused of involvement in the summary execution and subsequent cover-up of the murder of seven inmates in a jail in 2006, and of three escaped prisoners in 2005.
   
Geneva prosecutors charge that he personally shot one of the 2006 victims.
   
Sperisen denies the charges, which could carry a life sentence.
   
Appointed police chief in 2004, he left Guatemala in 2007 amid a scandal that saw him and the country's interior minister Carlos Vielmann resign that March, two weeks after the murder of three members of parliament from El Salvador.
   
Sperisen's paternal grandfather was a Swiss immigrant to Guatemala, giving him the right to Swiss citizenship.
   
His father is Guatemala's ambassador to the World Trade Organization, which is based in Geneva, and Sperisen was arrested in the city in August 2012.
   
He has been in jail since then, with Geneva justice authorities saying there is too great a risk that he will flee Switzerland if he is released on bail.
   
The trial is expected to last three weeks.
   
A Frenchman who was detained in the prison where the 2006 killings took place is scheduled to take the witness stand next Wednesday.
   
Sperisen's former right-hand man, Javier Figueroa, has reportedly also been called as a witness.
   
Figueroa was prosecuted by Austrian justice authorities on similar charges, and acquitted in 2013.
   
Former interior minister Vielmann, who holds dual Guatemalan and Spanish citizenship, now lives in Spain and is due to be tried by a court there over the prisoner killings.

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CRIME

Man wounds six in knife attacks in Swiss town

A man wounded six people with knife attacks in the streets of the northern Swiss town of Zofingen on Wednesday before being detained, police said.

Man wounds six in knife attacks in Swiss town

Two victims suffered serious wounds, police said. The attacker was also in hospital being treated for injuries that investigators said were self-inflicted.

The man was “believed to be of foreign origin” and was aged about 40, police said in a statement which added that he was thought to have acted alone.

All of the injured remained hospitalised late Wednesday.

Armed with “sharpened or pointed” metal weapons, the man first lashed out at a passer-by at the railway station in the town of 12,000 people in the Aargau canton, about 60 kilometres (38 miles) west of Zurich, police said.

He then wounded several people seemingly at random before entering a house, police added.

Among those attacked were two teachers from the Zofingen cantonal school, the institution’s director, Patrick Strossler, told 20minuten.ch news website.

The Aargauer Zeitung newspaper quoted one man as saying his pregnant wife had been among those attacked. She was cut in the face but her life was not threatened.

After two hours of negotiations with a specialised team, the man was arrested in the house, police said. The suspect had injured himself and was taken to hospital, said Bernhard Graser, a police spokesman.

Graser told the Zofinger Tagblatt newspaper that the attacker’s injuries were self-inflicted.

Police have called for witnesses to share video or photos that may be useful for their investigation.

Images shown by Aargauer Zeitung showed a large deployment of police and emergency vehicles. The security forces had assault rifles and bullet-proof vests.

A police helicopter landed on a nearby sports field, causing the local youth football team to cut short a training session, the newspaper said.

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