A 27-year-old Swiss woman has been sentenced to ten years in prison after she killed a 4-year-old girl in a sect-like community in the Zurich highlands ruled with an iron fist by a man who believed he was Jesus.

"/> A 27-year-old Swiss woman has been sentenced to ten years in prison after she killed a 4-year-old girl in a sect-like community in the Zurich highlands ruled with an iron fist by a man who believed he was Jesus.

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Woman gets 10 years in Swiss child torture case

A 27-year-old Swiss woman has been sentenced to ten years in prison after she killed a 4-year-old girl in a sect-like community in the Zurich highlands ruled with an iron fist by a man who believed he was Jesus.

Pfäffikon district court convicted the woman of murder and grievous bodily harm in the verdict on Tuesday, newspaper Zürcher Oberlander reports.

At the time of the incident in 2006, the woman lived in a religious sect in the Zurich Oberland as the girlfriend of the victim’s father, a man referred to in the Swiss media as Hash-Jesus. 

The 44-year old disciplinarian, who thought he was the son of God, was sentenced to nine years and six months imprisonment in 2010 for repeatedly beating his deceased daughter and her older half-sister, who survived the ordeal.

The court found that he had given the girls a sadistic upbringing through the use of a punishment system based on the Old Testament and designed to break the will of the children, who lived in “permanent fear“.

A 62-year old female social worker who lived with couple was also jailed for seven years for her part in the abuse.

The sect leader’s girlfriend admitted to the court that she used all her strength to shake the child in May 2006 in what she described as “an unintentional emotional reaction“ after the girl wet her pants.

The judge said the woman must have known that the brutal treatment of the children was wrong and ought to have “recognised the hunger and bruises“ of the children to whom she was a “virtual mother“.

The court found that she actively supported her boyfriend’s cruel regime as she did not want to lose him. The accused, whose gender was uncertain at birth, was baptized as a boy. She became acquainted with the girls’ father shortly after travelling abroad to undergo a sex change operation.

The state prosecutor had called for a 16-year sentence, but the judge took the woman’s remorse over the death of the almost 5-year-old girl into account. 

Her lawyers had called for two years, arguing she was not as guilty as her accomplices as she was only “part of the system.“

The ex-girlfriend said she has now distanced herself from the teachings of the sect leader.

The court set compensation for personal suffering for the surviving child at 30,000 francs ($33,600) to be paid by the woman and 75,000 ($83,950) to be paid jointly with the girl’s father and the ex-social worker. 

ZURICH

Zurich homeowners to pay significantly higher property taxes

Properties are more expensive in Zurich than almost anywhere else in Switzerland, but a planned new charge will place further financial burdens on the canton’s homeowners.

Zurich homeowners to pay significantly higher property taxes

Because Zurich is re-evaluating all properties, homeowners will have to brace themselves for significantly higher tax bills from 2027, cantonal authorities announced onTuesday. 

This step was triggered by two court rulings, according to which many properties in the canton were undervalued. The last estimate took place in 2009, but real estate prices have soared by an estimated 50 percent since then.

Therefore, property tax values are to increase by an average of 48 percent, while  imputed rental values for single-family homes will rise by an average of 11 percent and for apartments by 10 percent.

With this measure, the canton and municipalities can expect additional income of 85 million each.

What is the imputed rental value?

It is a tax term used to describe the theoretical rental value that you would have to pay if you were renting your own property.

In Switzerland, this value is used to calculate taxes, even if you live in your own apartment or house and do not pay rent.

For owner-occupied apartments in the canton of Zurich, the imputed rental value is 4.25 percent of the tax value. For single-family homes, it is 3.5 percent.

Authorities get ready for more ‘hardship’ cases

As a result of this tax hike, a larger number of hardship cases — that is, people who won’t be able to afford higher property taxes — the cantonal government is calling for the introduction of a ‘hardship regulation.’

Under this measure, a tax charge on the imputed rental value should be anchored in the law if it leads to an excessive tax burden in relation to the household income and assets.

The current cantonal hardship regulation serves as a transitional solution, which is in effect until legal basis is enacted at a federal level.

READ ALSO: How fast are property prices rising in Zurich in 2024? 

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