Zurich councilor indicted for shooting at Madonna and child poster
The Zurich public prosecutor's office confirmed the indictment of Sanija Ameti to The Associated Press on Monday. Her actions in September caused an uproar, prompting her to resign from the local leadership of the Green-Liberal party. Ameti is now listed as an independent on the website of the municipal council.
A redacted copy of the indictment, posted by the activist group Mass Voll, said Ameti was accused of 'disturbing religious freedom' and that prosecutors were seeking a fine and penalty equivalent to 12,500 Swiss francs (about $15,600).
The Swiss criminal code says anyone who 'publicly and maliciously insults or mocks the religious convictions of others' or 'maliciously desecrates objects of religious veneration' is liable to a monetary penalty, the indictment copy stated.
A top leader with Operation Libero, a political movement Ameti co-founded that describes itself as liberal and progressive, did not immediately respond to an e-mail seeking comment.
Ameti apologized at the time and quickly pulled down the images after posting them on Instagram and reportedly sought police protection against threats after the incident. She later said she had been practicing shots and found the poster 'big enough' for a suitable target.
The poster, an advertisement, showed details of the work 'Madonna with Child and the Archangel Michael' by 14th-century Italian painter Tommaso del Mazza before a sale.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBS News
5 hours ago
- CBS News
Watch Live: Suspects in shooting of CBP officer in NYC indicted on state charges
Two men arrested in the shooting an off-duty U.S. Customs and Border Protection officer last month in New York City are being indicted Wednesday on new charges. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg is scheduled to hold a news conference with New York City Mayor Eric Adams, where Bragg is expected to announce state charges against Miguel Francisco Mora Nunez and Christhian Aybar-Berroa. Officials with the Department of Homeland Security previously said the two would also face federal charges in the case. DHS has said both suspects were in the country illegally and had criminal records, and the NYPD added they were also wanted in active investigations. You can watch the announcement live on CBS News New York in the video player above. Police said the 42-year-old off-duty officer was sitting on the rocks with a friend near the historic Little Red Lighthouse at Fort Washington Park under the George Washington Bridge when the suspects approached them on a moped shortly before midnight on July 19. "One male dismounted the scooter, displayed a firearm and approached the two who were just trying to enjoy the city, like so many of us do during the hot evening hour," Adams said after the shooting. The officer was shot in the face and forearm and he returned fired, hitting one of the suspects, police said. He was rushed to NYC Health + Hospitals/Harlem in stable condition and was expected to make a full recovery. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and President Trump's border czar Tom Homan visited the wounded officer in the hospital and vowed to ramp up enforcement against so-called sanctuary cities like New York. The president himself also posted about the shooting on social media, blaming a flawed immigration system run by Democrats.

Associated Press
5 hours ago
- Associated Press
Belarus targets dozens of government critics with raids and detention, advocates say
TALLINN, Estonia (AP) — Authorities in Belarus unleashed a new wave of raids and detentions against government critics who took part in opposition rallies abroad earlier this year, officials and rights advocates said Wednesday, the latest move in a sweeping crackdown on dissent and freedom of speech by authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko. The country's Investigative Committee said it identified at least 207 participants in anti-Lukashenko rallies held in Poland, Lithuania, the United States, the U.K. and Canada to mark Belarus' short-lived independence in 1918 after the collapse of the Russian Empire. The raids, detentions and property seizures were carried out in the capital of Minsk and elsewhere across the country, authorities said. They didn't say how many people were targeted. Mass arrests, trials and convictions of government critics have continued since August 2020 when Lukashenko was handed a sixth term in office in an election that the opposition and the West denounced as rigged. In January, he was given another term in balloting also seen as orchestrated to keep him in office. Tens of thousands took to the streets in protest, in the biggest demonstrations the country has ever seen. Authorities unleashed a violent crackdown in response, detaining and beating thousands and driving some 500,000 more into exile abroad. The crackdown drew international condemnation, and the U.S. and the European Union imposed sanctions on Belarus. Belarus' oldest and most prominent rights group, the Viasna center, told The Associated Press that 'dozens of activists in Belarus' have been detained in the most recent wave of arrests. Viasna activist Pavel Sapelka called it 'the biggest wave of repression' this year. Viasna has recorded nearly 1,200 people held as political prisoners. The number includes the group's founder, Ales Bialiatski, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2022. At least eight political prisoners have died behind bars. Exiled Belarusian opposition has scheduled a rally in Warsaw for Saturday and Sunday to mark the fifth anniversary of the start of the mass protests. In response, the Belarusian Foreign Ministry on Tuesday summoned Poland's charge d'affaires and issued a note to denounce what they called 'destructive' and 'hostile' event that 'damages Belarusian-Polish relations.'


New York Times
8 hours ago
- New York Times
Man Who Lit Cigarette From Eternal Flame in Paris Is Arrested
The video set off outrage in France and across the internet: A man stepping nonchalantly over a chain barriers under the Arc de Triomphe to light a cigarette from the eternal flame at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. The man could face criminal charges in Paris, where he was arrested on Tuesday. The Paris Public Prosecutor's office declined to name the man but said in a statement that he 'acknowledges the facts' of the episode. 'This unworthy and deplorable act undermines the memory of those who died for France,' said Bruno Retailleau, France's interior minister, on social media. The suspect is a 47-year-old Moroccan man who is a legal resident of France, and is likely to have his residency permit revoked, according to a French official with knowledge of the matter who requested anonymity to discuss an ongoing legal process. In France, violating a burial site, tomb, urn or monument can be punished by up to a year in prison and a fine of 15,000 euros (about $17,400). France's Tomb of the Unknown Soldier was installed in 1920 beneath the Arc de Triomphe on the Champs-Élysées in Paris, and holds the remains of an unknown French soldier who died in World War I. The flame was lit in 1923 and has burned since. Video of the cigarette-lighting episode began spreading on social media on Tuesday. It shows the man, dressed in athletic wear, walking casually past a crowd of tourists gathered at the memorial. He stoops to light his cigarette from the eternal flame and walks on. The footage quickly prompted officials and others in France to call for the man's arrest. 'This is not a simple deviation: it is a desecration,' said Patricia Miralles, the French minister for war veterans. Across the world, war memorials with eternal flames have periodically been vandalized or desecrated. In 2012 in Australia, a man was arrested and charged with putting out the eternal flame at the Shrine of Remembrance in Melbourne with a fire extinguisher. In June, Russian officials said they were investigating reports that a child had poured water on an eternal flame in the Yaroslavl region. Aurelien Breeden contributed reporting from Paris.