The Scotsman

Should Fritzl be in a nursing home?

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It was the case that shocked Austria 16 years ago, when a 42-yearold woman told police that she had been held prisoner undergroun­d for 24 years by her own father.

Now a legal battle is raging over the future imprisonme­nt of Josef Fritzl, who was jailed for life in 2009 for keeping his daughter, Elisabeth, in a purpose-built jail in his basement and raping her thousands of times.

Last week, a court granted an applicatio­n for Fritzl to be granted early release from the psychiatri­c detention centre where he is held on the grounds of old age and dementia to live in an ordinary prison. From there, he could potentiall­y be moved into a nursing home. Now 88, the man who became known as the “monster of Amstetten”, after the Austrian town where he locked up his then18-year-old daughter in 1984, is said to be frail, vulnerable and suffering from dementia. However, after an appeal by prosecutor­s, his fate will now be decided by a court in Vienna.

The details of the case, which emerged at the time of his trial in 2009, were unimaginab­le. Drugged with ether, Elisabeth – who had been abused regularly by her father from the age of 11 – was locked in the basement after being asked to “help” her father mend the door.

The first months of her imprisonme­nt saw her shackled and unable to move, released only because, as her father admitted during the trial, the chains were impeding his ability to abuse her.

During her time undergroun­d, she gave birth to seven children, one of whom died after Fritzl failed to get him medical care as a newborn.

There is little doubt Fritzl, now elderly by any measure, is unlikely to be a danger to society. Whether or not he is truly remorseful for what he did – and his lawyer claims he is – physically, he would be unlikely to overpower anybody.

Other residents of the nursing home may not be aware of his identity – he already lives under a different name.

Yet the question with which the Viennese judges will have to grapple is whether this man, who is guilty of such unspeakabl­e crimes, deserves to live out his final days – however many they may be – in the ordinary way of normal life which he denied to his daughter.

Josef Fritzl pictured during his trial in Austria in 2009.

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PICTURE: GETTY
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