Le Nouvelliste says man has been under medical care for psychiatric problems

SION, SWITZERLAND – A Sion judge was attacked and suffered multiple injuries Saturday night 28 January in the city centre. Le Nouvelliste reported Monday morning that a man who has been under medical treatment and who suffers severe psychiatric problems has been arrested and taken to a special detention centre. Police confirmed at 11:00 Monday that a 29-year-old Swiss German who lives in Valais sought medical treatment Sunday morning for injuries he suffered Saturday night. He told medical staff that he was the man who attacked the judge, and he then turned himself into police.

The attack appeared in some way linked to the “Luca” case that has received heavy media attention, particularly in Valais, because the attacker called out “Luca, Luca” and was reported by the judge to say he would pay the magistrate back in kind.

Luca Mongelli is a youth who was badly injured, the victim of a bizarre and vicious attack in Veysonnaz in 2002. The case received heavy media attention at the time and, recently made it back into the news. The boy, age 7 at the time, was found injured and naked, in the snow, in Veysonnaz, after taking the family dog, Rocky, for a walk with Luca’s younger brother Marco. Luca was able to say immediately after the attack that humans had done this to him, but legal and medical analyses at the time showed Rocky to be the attacker, and a drawing done by the very young Marco, as well as his words at the time, pointed to the 30 kg 7-month-old dog. The case was suspended in 2004 and the family has called publicly for further investigation. Luca today is tetraplegic as a result of his injuries.

The Valais attorney general held a press conference on the affair 26 January (details below).

Saturday’s attack was violent and wrongly evoked the Luca case

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The 5,000-year-old door in Zurich may be one of the oldest found in Europe (photo, city of Zurich)

Update 2, 22 October  Zurich, Switzerland (GeneveLunch) – Archeological digs in the centre of Zurich have been turning up a number of treasures, among them a door that is 5,000 years old.

The excavations, near the opera in Zurich, began in May 2010 and will be completed in January 2011, making way for the construction of a parking lot.

Niels Bleicher, who is leading the archeological project, told AP that the door, made of poplar wood, is “very interesting, solid and elegant”, with a “remarkable” system for holding together the planks.

An ingenious system holds the door together - (photo, city of Zurich)

He also noted that it’s rare, during a dig, to come up with as many interesting items as they have been finding in Zurich.

Archaeologists have found traces of at least five Neolithic villages believed to have existed at the site between 3,700 and 2,500 years B.C., including objects such as a flint dagger from what is now Italy and an elaborate hunting bow.

Links to other sites: Business Week/AP, 20 Minutes (Fre), WRS background video story, June 2010

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dreifuss_international_geneva_building_project

Ruth Dreifuss, former Swiss president, who grew up in the Secheron district in Geneva, attended a December 2008 presentation on the development of the international Geneva project, near the WTO.

Geneva, Switzerland (GenevaLunch) - The proposed extension to the World Trade Organization’s building at Centre William Rappard will be decided this Sunday 27 September by the city of Geneva’s voters. The vote is a strictly municipal affair, and the outcome is not binding on the canton, which has the final say on city planning decisions. But this vote is being seen as a test of the city’s commitment to the concept of Genève internationale, host to the European headquarters of the UN and to more than 30 specialized UN organizations, as well as to a large number of non-governemental organizations (NGOs).

A strong “no” vote by the citizens of Geneva would seriously weaken that commitment. Pierre Vanek, leader of the project’s opponents, points out in an interview published in Le Temps that the canton can ignore the result of a refusal, but “people wouldn’t understand why it was going against a popular vote.”

The cantonal authorities approved the building extension because the WTO urgently needs the extra space.

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