Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Tourist Under Arrest In Nepal On Child Sex Abuse Charges

The Canadian Press, 17 Jan, 2015 03:44 PM
    KATHMANDU, Nepal — A Canadian tourist has been arrested in Nepal on charges he lured a 9-year-old boy to his hotel room and had sex with him, a police official said Saturday.
     
    Ernest Fenwick MacIntosh, 71, was arrested at a hotel in Lalitpur, a suburb south of the capital, Kathmandu.
     
    He was ordered detained by the district court until the charges could be further investigated, Lalitpur's police chief Pushpa Ranjit said.
     
    MacIntosh arrived in Nepal on a tourist visa in August 2014, and was a frequent visitor to the children's shelter where the boy lived, and they met there, police said. They also said that Macintosh has been accused of threatening the boy.
     
    The Himalayan Times quoted a spokesperson with the Metropolitan Police Range in Jawalakhel as saying the alleged incident at the hotel occurred on Dec. 13.
     
    The newspaper report said police received a complaint from the family of the alleged victim on Dec. 19 that a Canadian tourist lured him into a room at a guest house.
     
    Police declined to provide further details because the case involves a minor, however, they said they were trying to determine whether there might be other alleged victims.
     
    If convicted, MacIntosh could face up to 10 years in jail.
     
    In 2013, an Ernest Fenwick MacIntosh had 17 child sex offence convictions in Nova Scotia quashed after the Supreme Court of Canada ruled his case took too long to go to trial.
     
    He was accused of sexually abusing boys in Cape Breton in the 1970s and the allegations surfaced in 1995, when he was living in India.
     
    But he wasn't extradited until 2007, and the first of his two trials in Nova Scotia didn't start until 2010. His convictions were quashed in April 2013.
     
    A Foreign Affairs spokesman in Ottawa said department officials were aware of the situation in Nepal, but did not provide any other details.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    TransCanada CEO says industry has lived through worse than latest crude downturn

    TransCanada CEO says industry has lived through worse than latest crude downturn
    CALGARY — The CEO of TransCanada Corp. (TSX:TRP) says he doesn't see the oil industry's appetite for new pipelines faltering even though crude prices have skidded recently to the lowest in more than five-years.

    TransCanada CEO says industry has lived through worse than latest crude downturn

    B.C.'s old Riverview Hospital to offer substance-abuse, mental-health programs

    B.C.'s old Riverview Hospital to offer substance-abuse, mental-health programs
    What was once the home for Metro Vancouver's mentally ill will soon be the location of a rehabilitation and recovery program for those battling mental-health and substance-abuse issues.

    B.C.'s old Riverview Hospital to offer substance-abuse, mental-health programs

    B.C. First Nation still plans to open luxury hospital for tourists, Canadians

    B.C. First Nation still plans to open luxury hospital for tourists, Canadians
    Plans for a for-profit hospital on Westbank First Nation land in West Kelowna, B.C., are still alive despite years of apparent inactivity, says the band's leader.

    B.C. First Nation still plans to open luxury hospital for tourists, Canadians

    Alberta approach to climate change could be a model for North America: Harper

    Alberta approach to climate change could be a model for North America: Harper
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper says the Alberta approach to pricing and controlling greenhouse gas emissions could serve as a model for all of North America.

    Alberta approach to climate change could be a model for North America: Harper

    Stateless Yukon Man, 60, Ponders Declaring Refugee Status In Canada

    Stateless Yukon Man, 60, Ponders Declaring Refugee Status In Canada
    VANCOUVER — Donovan McGlaughlin admits his story is hard to believe, but he wants Canadians to keep an open mind as he explains why he may have to apply as a political refugee in the country he's called home for his 60 years.

    Stateless Yukon Man, 60, Ponders Declaring Refugee Status In Canada

    Decision to build Site C dam 'incredibly stupid': First Nations leader

    Decision to build Site C dam 'incredibly stupid': First Nations leader
    VANCOUVER — A look at what was said about the B.C. government's decision to proceed with the controversial $8.8 billion Site C hydroelectric dam.

    Decision to build Site C dam 'incredibly stupid': First Nations leader