Alps shooting: key witness Zainab, seven, speaks to police

 
EPA
10 September 2012
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Seven-year-old Zainab al-Hilli, who parents were murdered in a shooting spree during a family holiday in the French Alps, has spoken to police.

Zainab was shot in the shoulder and so brutally beaten during the attack that doctors placed her in a medically induced coma.

She has since regained consciousness and was able to hold a brief discussion with officers in France, sources close to the investigation have said.

Zainab is seen as a key witness to the horrific attack that left her parents and another woman, believed to be her grandmother, dead.

Saad al-Hilli, 50, was killed in the family car alongside his dentist wife Iqbal on Wednesday in a remote spot close to Lake Annecy.

Sylvain Mollier, 45, a French cyclist who apparently stumbled across the shooting, was also killed.

Zainab's younger sister Zeena, four, who survived by cowering behind her mother, has flown back to Britain with carers.

While she is unable to shed much light on the murders, French police believe Zainab could provide them with crucial details to help piece together what happened.

A source said: "They have been able to speak to her but this was just an initial meeting. They could not go into any detail and the child was very tired. It was not permitted for the discussion to go any further."

Police must now wait for a green light from medics before they can engage the girl in a more lengthy discussion when she is expected to be asked about her memories of the attack.

Her sister Zeena returned to Britain after two relatives, understood to be an aunt and uncle, flew out to France. She is under the care of the authorities and social services.

It is as yet unclear who will take custody of the two orphaned children.

The spotlight in the criminal investigation has turned on the al-Hilli family home in the affluent village of Claygate in Surrey after police identified items of concern and called in a bomb disposal squad from the Royal Logistic Corps.

Neighbouring properties were evacuated as experts examined the mock-Tudor house, focusing on a shed at the bottom of the garden. But officers later said that the unidentified items were not hazardous.

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