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Austrian Monsters

‘This Has Got To Be Austria' is the new tourism slogan, advertising the Alpine Republic that gave us Mozart, the Debutante Ball and Kurt Waldheim the Nazi UN chief. No slogan more sinister and unfortunate in its timing. Psychotherapist RENATE OGILVIE on the crime that continues to shock the world.

The world, hardened and unimpressionable when it comes to murder, reeled back from what has already been called the crime of the century. Who knows what is still in store for us. But the Fritzl case is surely in a class of its own.

A father who kept his daughter as a sex slave for 24 years. Who fathered eight children, five of whom emerged waiflike, their teeth rotten with neglect, their pale bodies riddled with immune problems, into daylight which none had seen since their birth, shocked and clinging to each other, with little speech. They were accompanied by their mother, Fritzl's daughter Elisabeth looking like a sixty-year-old. All of them represent an unparalleled challenge for a crisis team of psychologists who lack any comparable clinical therapy model for this type of comprehensive trauma.

All aspects of this horrific crime are unique. They are repulsive, impossible to comprehend, and bizarre as soon as one attempts to imagine the details. The food supply. The rubbish disposal. Nappies for the babies. The nightmarish births without assistance other than the monstrous father. The continuous rapes in the confines of their dungeon, and in the presence of the cowed and terrified children. The horror of the dark. The smell. The loneliness.

The terror that Fritzl, their tormentor might die and they might be entombed, because in a crowning act of hellishness the electronics expert had constructed the door in a way that made it impossible to be opened from the inside. 

This is the second case of incarceration of women in Austria. The country's chancellor, Herr Gusenbauer is now worried about tourism. ‘There is no case Austria,' he declared. ‘None of this has anything to do with our country. Britain after all had Jack the Ripper and surely people continued to travel there.‘ 

Well, he might talk to his colleagues in Belgium. Wherever Belgians go these days, the first thing they are asked about is Marc Dutroux, the notorious serial killer who is now one of those very few Belgians that are famous.

The land of Mozart innocently befouled by the actions of two individuals? Perhaps. But let us not forget that Austria is the country of the famous ‘Schmaeh' - soft soap cynicism and self-deluding bullshit - as well as manners and well-turned compliments. It is a secretive place, where curtains are drawn, lips are sealed and the past is taboo. It is the world of Orson Welles's brilliant post-war movie The Third Man, full of guilt and pretence, denial and wishful thinking.

Fritzl's crime is not uniquely Austrian. Other countries have monsters too. But one does wonder about the good burghers of idyllic Amstetten, where Fritzl was a respected man who told people that he was investing in real estate for his grandchildren. Surely one of the sickest private jokes ever.

Did they never wonder about his giant shopping bags? About the strange arrival and disappearance of children? His cowed wife?

An earlier photograph of Fritzl shows him to be a jovial holiday maker with a knowing smile, and cunning eyes a little similar to that other Uber-monster, Stalin. But unlike the darkly glamorous Father of the Soviet Union, Fritzl drove around in an old Merc, had a hair implant, and was the picture of normality.

‘I always wanted the best for them,' he told his interrogators. 'I was a good provider.'

Now that is truly creepy.

Renate Ogilvie is a psychotherapist and teacher of Buddhist philosophy.

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Almost everyone in the country is now buying and selling in foreign currency, rendering the Zimbabwe dollar almost worthless on the domestic market.

Even bank queues that characterized the daily lives of people last year are disappearing, as more people turn to using either the South African rand or U.S. dollars.

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Chisipite High School in Harare is charging US$1,200 per term, and was asking pupils to bring fuel coupons worth US$300 with them on their first day of the term as a deposit.

Roxer Academy primary in Harare is charging US$800 a term, while in Bulawayo the Masiyephambili Primary School is requiring a fee of US$650.

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