belfasttelegraph

Sunday 19 May 2013

Bomb squad leaves Alps murder victim's Surrey home

A Royal Logistic Corps bomb disposal truck arrives at the cordon close to the home of Saad al-Hilli in Claygate, Surrey, as police evacuated an area around his home
Alps Massacre. Several hours after police arrived on scene, Mr Al-Hilli's four-year-old daughter Zeena was found alive huddling under her mother's legs inside the car.
Forensic officers outside the home of French shooting victim, Saad al-Hilli in Claygate, Surrey
The caravan and tent used by Saad al-Hilli and his family while on holiday at the Le Solitaire du Lac campsite on Lake Annecy in the Haute-Savoie region of south-eastern France.
Forensic officers outside the home of the French shooting victim in Claygate, Surrey
The property in Surrey is being searched in a bid for clues in the probe into the shootings
The caravan and tent used by Saad al-Hilli and his family while on holiday at the Le Solitaire du Lac campsite on Lake Annecy in the Haute-Savoie region of south-eastern France.
Police tape seals the caravan and tent used by Saad al-Hilli and his family while on holiday at the Le Solitaire du Lac campsite on Lake Annecy in the Haute-Savoie region of south-eastern France. Mr Al Hilli, his wife Iqbal and his mother-in-law were found murdered in their BMW car near the village of Chevaline on Wednesday. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Tuesday September 4, 2012. One of his daughters was injured and a second lay undetected and uninjured for hours in the back of the vehicle. A French cyclist was also killed in the attack possibly killed after discovering the crime in progress. See PA story POLIDE Alps. Photo credit should read: Chris Ison/PA Wire
A gendarme blocks access to the site where four people were shot dead near Chevaline in the French Alps (AP)
CLAYGATE, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 06: Journalists gather at a house believed to be owned by a British family murdered in a shooting in the French Alps France on September 6, 2012 in Claygate, England. French police are investigating a multiple murder after the bodies of three members of a British family were found in a bullet-riddled car in the French resort of Annecy. A 4-year-old girl, who had remained hidden for hours, was also found alive after investigators eventually entered the car. Local news agencies have named the male victim as Saad al-Hilli. (Photo by Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images)
Cameras are seen in front of Gendarmes who blocks access to a site where people were shot to death near Chevaline, French Alps, Thursday Sept. 6, 2012. A 4-year-old British girl hid for eight hours beneath the bodies of slain family members in the back of their car before she was discovered by French investigators who had been guarding the vehicle, a prosecutor said Thursday. Three people - a man and two women - had been shot to death, as was a French cyclist whose body was found nearby
Gendarmes guard the camp where the British family were holidaying at Saint Jorioz, near Annecy (AP)
A general view of Annecy in the Haute-Savoie region of south-eastern France near where the bodies of four people were found, three family members in their car and another cyclist who also suffered gunshot wounds and was found lying close to the vehicle. A four-year-old British girl was found alive underneath the bodies of her parents around eight hours after a brutal massacre in the Alps, French authorities said today
A car drives through the entrance of the campground where the British family were holidaying in Saint Jorioz, near Annecy (AP)
A general view of Annecy in the Haute-Savoie region of south-eastern France near where the bodies of four people were found, three family members in their car and another cyclist who also suffered gunshot wounds and was found lying close to the vehicle. A four-year-old British girl was found alive underneath the bodies of her parents around eight hours after a brutal massacre in the Alps, French authorities said today
A general view of Annecy in the Haute-Savoie region of south-eastern France near where the bodies of four people were found, three family members in their car and another cyclist who also suffered gunshot wounds and was found lying close to the vehicle. A four-year-old British girl was found alive underneath the bodies of her parents around eight hours after a brutal massacre in the Alps, French authorities said today
A gendarme blocks access to site where people were shot to death near Chevaline, French Alps, Thursday Sept. 6, 2012. A 4-year-old British girl hid for eight hours beneath the bodies of slain family members in the back of their car before she was discovered by French investigators who had been guarding the vehicle, a prosecutor said Thursday. Three people - a man and two women - had been shot to death, as was a French cyclist whose body was found nearby. (AP Photo/Laurent Cipriani)
Gendarmes block access to a killing site near Chevaline, French Alps, Wednesday, Sept. 5, 2012. French authorities say at least four people have been shot to death in a forest in the Alps. An official with the regional administration for the Haute-Savoie region says three of the bodies were found in a BMW registered in Britain. (AP Photo / Alexis Moro)
Gendarmerie Col. FranÁois, left, and Annecy prosecutor Eric Maillaud answer reporter near a killing site, near Chevaline, French Alps
A Gendarme's car heads to a killing site near Chevaline, French Alps, Wednesday Sept.5, 2012. French authorities say at least four people have been shot to death in a forest in the Alps. An official with the regional administration for the Haute-Savoie region says three of the bodies were found in a BMW registered in Britain. (AP Photo/Alexis Moro)
Gendarmes block access to a killing site near Chevaline, French Alps, Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012. French authorities say at least four people have been shot to death in a forest in the Alps. An official with the regional administration for the Haute-Savoie region says three of the bodies were found in a BMW registered in Britain. (AP Photo/Alexis Moro)
Gendarmes block access to a killing site near Chevaline, French Alps, Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012. French authorities say at least four people have been shot to death in a forest in the Alps.An official with the regional administration for the Haute-Savoie region says three of the bodies were found in a BMW registered in Britain. (AP Photo/Alexis Moro)
Gendarmes block access to a killing site near Chevaline, French Alps, Wednesday, Sept. 5, 2012. French authorities say at least four people have been shot to death in a forest in the Alps. An official with the regional administration for the Haute-Savoie region says three of the bodies were found in a BMW registered in Britain. (AP Photo / Alexis Moro)
Gendarmes block access to a killing site near Chevaline, French Alps, Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012. French authorities say at least four people have been shot to death in a forest in the Alps.An official with the regional administration for the Haute-Savoie region says three of the bodies were found in a BMW registered in Britain. (AP Photo/Alexis Moro)
A road sign is seen while a Gendarme blocks access to a killing site near Chevaline, French Alps, Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012. French authorities say at least four people have been shot to death in a forest in the Alps. An official with the regional administration for the Haute-Savoie region says three of the bodies were found in a BMW registered in Britain. (AP Photo/Alexis Moro)
Gendarmes block access to a killing site near Chevaline, French Alps, Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012. French authorities say at least four people have been shot to death in a forest in the Alps.An official with the regional administration for the Haute-Savoie region says three of the bodies were found in a BMW registered in Britain. (AP Photo/Alexis Moro)

The bomb disposal team called in to search the family home of French Alps shooting victim Saad al-Hilli has now left the property - and the extended police cordon around the house has been lifted

Neighbours were evacuated from the area as experts examined the mock-Tudor house in the affluent village of Claygate.

Officers from the Royal Logistic Corps arrived in a bomb disposal truck at around 10am and left shortly after midday.

A cordon which had been extended to block the road in front of the property was later taken down.

Attention on the family home intensified as police in Annecy, France, waited to question seven-year-old Zainab al-Hilli, who has regained consciousness following the attack that left her parents dead.

Her father Saad al-Hilli, 50, was murdered in his car alongside his dentist wife Iqbal on Wednesday while the family holidayed in the picturesque region.

Mrs al-Hilli's mother also died in the shooting along with Sylvain Mollier, 45, a French cyclist who apparently stumbled across the attack.

Zainab's younger sister Zeena, four, who survived after she hid behind her mother, flew back to Britain with carers yesterday.

Members of the media had been moved back around 200 yards from the al-Hilli home.

The police investigation appeared to focus on a shed or workshop at the bottom of the garden.

Major Chris Hunter, a retired British Army Counter-Terrorist Bomb Disposal Operator, said the bomb squad could have been called to the family home following the discovery of an improvised explosive device (IED).

He said the Royal Logistic Corps team would usually be called out if there was a potential terrorist threat.

But he said the squad could also have been the nearest team available.

"I imagine the police have discovered something they are unhappy with, something that is a potential improvised explosive device or an improvised explosive itself," he said.

"It could be a hazardous, dangerous or unstable substance."

But he said the item could turn out to be an everyday substance.

The bomb disposal team would either send a robot to "neutralise" a potential IED or the job could be done by an officer dressed in a special armoured suit, he added.

He said any delay in discovering the items of concern could be down to the fact that police investigating the shooting would have been looking for a "very different sort of evidence".

Alternatively, whatever they have unearthed could have been "secreted or hidden somewhere", he said.

He added: "Potentially, if they (the police) thought there was a firearm there and it was booby-trapped, then they would call the bomb squad to investigate it further."

Attention on the property has intensified as police in Annecy in France waited to question seven-year-old Zainab al-Hilli, who has regained consciousness following the attack that left her parents dead.

Her father Saad al-Hilli, 50, was murdered in his car alongside his dentist wife, Iqbal, on Wednesday while the family holidayed in the picturesque region.

Mrs al-Hilli's mother also died in the shooting along with Sylvain Mollier, 45, a French cyclist who apparently stumbled across the attack.

Zainab's younger sister Zeena, four, who survived after she hid behind her mother, flew back to Britain with carers yesterday.

Soon after the cordon was extended, a Royal Logistic Corps bomb disposal truck arrived.

Officers were seen apparently receiving a briefing at a neighbouring home.

Police plan to look at aspects of Mr al-Hilli's life to try to find a motive for the murders and also speak with his brother, Zaid Hilli.

Investigators have disclosed that Mr al-Hilli's brother has approached UK police to deny any feud with his sibling over an inheritance.

Police have yet to speak to Zainab, who was shot and beaten during the ordeal and is seen as a key witness.

She remains under sedation after coming out of a medically-induced coma.

Public prosecutor Eric Maillaud said the child will be interviewed as soon as doctors allow it.

Her sister returned to the UK after two relatives - reportedly an aunt and uncle - travelled to France over the weekend alongside a British social worker and family liaison officers from Surrey Police.

The youngster is now under the care of the authorities and the social services, but Mr Maillaud revealed he did not know where she was going to stay.

British police are now working alongside their French counterparts to unravel the mystery surrounding the four deaths.

Officers first entered the al-Hillis' family home on Saturday after a team of four French investigators, led by Colonel Marc de Tarle, arrived in the UK.

It is believed detectives are looking into Mr al-Hilli's professional life for possible clues. He worked as a contractor for a satellite technology company in Surrey.

Witnesses have said they saw a green four-wheel-drive vehicle in the area at the time of the killings, and possibly a motorbike.

Investigators found 25 spent bullet cartridges at the scene - a car park in the Combe d'Ire forest near Chevaline - while two mobile phones found in the al-Hilli's bullet-ridden BMW are being analysed by police.

Each of the four victims of the atrocity was shot twice in the head.

One theory is that shots could have been fired during a bungled armed robbery, with Mr Mollier being a witness to the crime.

But speculation about other possible motives, including a pre-planned attack by professional hitmen, remained rife.

One man, thought to be one of the last people to see the family alive, told reporters the family had arrived at the isolated car park at least an hour before they were killed.

Laurent Fillion-Robin, 38, also said there was no sign of any vehicle following the family.

The builder said he was working on a house in Chevaline when he saw the red British-registered BMW drive past between 2.30pm and 3pm. The shooting was reported to police just before 4pm.

Mr Fillion-Robin added that he did not hear any shots fired that afternoon and said the car park, near Lake Annecy, was not the sort of place that families with young children would usually go.

Some media reports have suggested that Mr al-Hilli, an engineer who left Saddam Hussein's Iraq several years ago, was known to the security services and was put under surveillance by Metropolitan Police Special Branch during the second Gulf war.

A Scotland Yard spokesman said they could not comment. But it is understood there is no link between the deaths and any national security issues.

Mr Maillaud revealed the family had visited France a number of times before and it was not the first time they had been to Le Solitaire du Lac, a campsite in Saint-Jorioz they were staying at when the attack happened.

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