Close X
Saturday, November 16, 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

    Nisga'a Sign Pipeline Benefits Deal With B.C., Back LNG Projects

    Nisga'a Sign Pipeline Benefits Deal With B.C., Back LNG Projects
    VICTORIA — The Nisga'a Nation has signed an agreement with the B.C. government to receive benefits from proposed liquefied natural gas projects.

    Nisga'a Sign Pipeline Benefits Deal With B.C., Back LNG Projects

    Yukon man tells court he can legally shoot wolves because of aboriginal rights

    Yukon man tells court he can legally shoot wolves because of aboriginal rights
    WHITEHORSE — A First Nations' man who claims to have an aboriginal right to shoot wolves has pleaded not guilty to three charges under the Yukon Wildlife Act.

    Yukon man tells court he can legally shoot wolves because of aboriginal rights

    CBC not barring Linden MacIntyre interviews despite internal memo

    CBC not barring Linden MacIntyre interviews despite internal memo
    TORONTO — Linden MacIntyre has not been barred from appearing on CBC News Network this week despite an internal memo to the contrary.

    CBC not barring Linden MacIntyre interviews despite internal memo

    'Nude' Judge Seeks Stay Of Sex Photos As Evidence In Disciplinary Hearing

    'Nude' Judge Seeks Stay Of Sex Photos As Evidence In Disciplinary Hearing
    TORONTO — A senior Manitoba judge is asking Federal Court to block a disciplinary committee from viewing graphic sexual photographs her husband took of her.

    'Nude' Judge Seeks Stay Of Sex Photos As Evidence In Disciplinary Hearing

    Canadian students among most computer literate, international test shows

    Canadian students among most computer literate, international test shows
    TORONTO — Students in two Canadian provinces proved more computer literate than the international average in a new test meant to help educators and policy-makers understand how integrating technology in schools affects children's skills.

    Canadian students among most computer literate, international test shows

    How the U.S. Senate got its famous filibuster rule that frustrated Keystone

    How the U.S. Senate got its famous filibuster rule that frustrated Keystone
    WASHINGTON — Proponents of Canada's Keystone XL pipeline might be scratching their heads raw this week wondering how they got 59 per cent support in a U.S. congressional vote and still didn't get a pipeline law.

    How the U.S. Senate got its famous filibuster rule that frustrated Keystone