[an error occurred while processing this directive]
BBC News
watch One-Minute World News
Languages
Last Updated: Monday, 26 January, 2004, 17:05 GMT
Cannibal 'will not kill again'
Armin Meiwes
Armin Meiwes has confessed to killing his victim
Self-confessed German cannibal Armin Meiwes regrets the killing and will never repeat it, he has told his trial in a closing statement.

Earlier, prosecutors said he should spend his life behind bars for killing and eating his 43-year-old victim.

Mr Meiwes admits killing and eating Bernd-Juergen Brandes, but says it was "killing on demand", not murder.

"I regret it all very much, but I can't undo it," he told the court, insisting that Mr Brandes had chosen to die.

He slaughtered his victim like a piece of livestock and treated him as an object of his fancy
Prosecutor Marcus Koehler
Mr Meiwes' defence lawyer, Harald Ermel, said it was a form of mercy killing - because Mr Brandes had given his consent to be killed and eaten.

That should carry a maximum five-year prison sentence, he said.

But prosecutor Marcus Koehler, in his closing argument, said Mr Meiwes, 42, killed for sexual pleasure and should be locked up for life.

"He slaughtered his victim like a piece of livestock and treated him as an object of his fancy," he said.

Global interest

The gruesome details of the trial have attracted interest from around the world.

When it opened, Mr Meiwes confessed in detail to the killing at his home in the town of Rotenberg.

Bernd-Juergen Brandes
Brandes "asked to be stabbed to death," according to Meiwes
He said Mr Brandes, who had travelled from Berlin after the two met on the internet, wanted to be stabbed to death after drinking a bottle of cold medicine to lose consciousness.

A doctor told the court that Mr Brandes died from loss of blood and that the medication, along with a half-bottle of alcohol and 20 sleeping pills he took beforehand, could not have lessened his pain.

Police tracked Mr Meiwes down in December 2002 after being alerted to an advertisement he had placed on the internet for a man willing to be killed, carved up and eaten.

Mr Koehler said Mr Meiwes was not interested in the needs or desires of his victim and that Mr Brandes' willingness to die had only provided the accused with an opportunity to carry out his long-held cannibal fantasy.

Mr Meiwes has admitted being sexually aroused by the process of preparing his victim.

Last week a second expert told the court that Mr Meiwes was "fully fit for trial and not mentally ill".

A verdict is expected on Friday.

Cannibalism is not a crime under the German constitution, but the crime of murder carries a minimum 15-year prison sentence.




SEE ALSO:
German cannibal 'fit for trial'
23 Jan 04  |  Europe
Cannibal victim never told lover
12 Jan 04  |  Europe
Cannibal 'wanted to get married'
09 Jan 04  |  Europe
Cannibal 'sought other victims'
08 Dec 03  |  Europe
Cannibalism: A modern taboo
02 Dec 03  |  Europe



PRODUCTS AND SERVICES

News Front Page | Africa | Americas | Asia-Pacific | Europe | Middle East | South Asia
UK | Business | Entertainment | Science/Nature | Technology | Health
Have Your Say | In Pictures | Week at a Glance | Country Profiles | In Depth | Programmes
Americas Africa Europe Middle East South Asia Asia Pacific