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Swiss naked hiker's appeal upheld

BBC Published May 27, 2010 Reviewed Jul 1, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
A man was fined 100 Swiss francs (70 euros, £60) for naked hiking after eyewitnesses complained he was visible near a communal barbecue area and a Christian care home.
100 Swiss francs · fine70 euros · fine60 pounds sterling · fine
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Citation-ready fact
Appenzell only gave women the vote in 1990.
1990 · women's suffrage in Appenzell
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Citation-ready fact
Local authorities will cover court costs of about 870 Swiss francs.
about 870 Swiss francs · court costs
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Citation-ready fact
The defendant, aged 47, said he had been hiking nude for two years.
2 years · duration of nude hiking
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Citation-ready fact
Appenzell passed a law last year allowing naked hikers to be fined.
1 year · time since law was passed
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A court in Switzerland has upheld the appeal of a man who was fined for rambling naked.

The court in Trogen ruled that the naked hiking did not amount to "indecent behaviour".

A prosecutor was quoted as saying the ruling should not be seen as giving blanket permission for people to walk naked in the area.

The case was the first since the eastern Swiss canton of Appenzell allowed naked hikers to be fined.

Appenzell has become a popular destination for those who like to hike without clothes, but many locals are unhappy about the trend.

The hiker in question was fined 100 Swiss francs (70 euros, £60) after eyewitnesses complained that he had been hiking in full view of a communal barbecuing area.

They also say he walked past a Christian care home, whose residents saw him.

The court lifted the fine, while local authorities will cover court costs of about 870 francs, the website swissinfo.ch reported.

The 47-year-old defendant said he had been hiking nude for two years and that most people were friendly towards him, according to Swiss newspaper Le Temps.

Swiss federal law states that public nudity is not a crime.

The BBC's Imogen Foulkes reports that Appenzell is traditionally a rather devout and conservative region, which only gave women the vote in 1990.

Authorities had hoped last year's public order law allowing for fines, would be a deterrent to naked ramblers.

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