Friday, June 01, 2012

ANOTHER CANNIBALISTIC CRIME

True crime can be stranger than fiction. Last March in Russia, two men were arrested for separate acts of cannibalism. Last Saturday, Miami cops killed a naked man who was cannibalizing the face of a homeless man. And now we have an Iranian professor in Sweden eating the hot lips he sliced off of his cheating wife.

PROFESSOR ‘CUT OFF HIS WIFE’S LIPS AND ATE THEM BECAUSE HE BELIEVED SHE HAD INSULTED HIS HONOR BY HAVING AN AFFAIR’
By Richard Orange

Mail Online
May 31, 2012

UPPSALA, SWEDEN -- A former associate professor at Sweden's prestigious Karolinska medical institute is being held in police custody for cutting off his wife's lips with a knife and then eating them in Stockholm.

According to Sweden's Aftonbladet newspaper, the man flew into a jealous rage over suspicions that his much younger wife had been having an affair.

The man, who is 52, admitted to cutting off his wife's lips in a closed court hearing, the paper reported, saying it was retaliation.

'It was honour related. He doesn't seem to regret a thing. He believes she insulted him,' a source with knowledge of the matter told the paper.

The assault was so brutal that the prosecutor tried to have him charged for attempted murder. But the court sought to downgrade the charge to aggravated assault.

Ingela Hessius Ekman, who represents the victim, said her client may have suffered irreparable damage.

'She has very serious injuries, doctors can not yet determine whether she can be healed or not,' she told Aftonbladet.

'She's in a lot of pain.'

Miss Ekman added that the trial is due to start at the beginning of July.

The man, who is from Iran, was doing post-Doctoral research at the institute in 2010.

He is now employed by a university in Tehran, but still lived partly and Stockholm, where he collaborated with his old research group at the university, and used its email services and library through a 'declaration of association.'

'It is, of course, a very tragic story,' says Bengt Norrving, the institute's director.

'But since the researcher in question is not an employee of Karolinska Institutet we are unable to consider legal action.'

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