Police wait to interview key Alps shooting witness

PHOTO | JUSTIN TALLIS British police officers arrive at a residential address believed to be the British home of the Hilli family shot dead in their car in the French Alps in Claygate, in south-east England, on September 6, 2012. A family shot dead near a famed tourist site in the French Alps were British residents of Iraqi origin, police said Thursday, as fellow campers expressed shock over the brutal crime. Wednesday's shooting near Lake Annecy claimed the lives of four people -- a father, mother and grandmother in a British-registered BMW estate and a passing cyclist.

What you need to know:

  • Officials on Sunday said seven-year-old Zainab al-Hilli had regained consciousness but warned that she was still under sedation and her speech was not yet audible
  • It was not clear how long investigators specialising in dealing with child witnesses would have to wait before speaking to Zainab
  • Police on Sunday carried out a second day of searches at the family home at Claygate in southern England.

ANNECY, France

Police were on Monday waiting to question a young British girl seen as the key to solving the mystery of a shooting on a lonely forest road that left three members of her family and a cyclist dead.

Doctors placed seven-year-old Zainab al-Hilli in an artificial coma following the murders last Wednesday to help her recover from a fractured skull.

Officials on Sunday said she had regained consciousness but warned that she was still under sedation and her speech was not yet audible.

Her four-year-old sister Zeena, who survived unhurt for eight hours after the attack hidden beneath her mother's body, has already been seen by police but was unable to provide any information.

It was not clear how long investigators specialising in dealing with child witnesses would have to wait before speaking to Zainab.

Annecy prosecutor Eric Maillaud, however, has said she was "extremely traumatised" and stressed that there was no question of rushing the process.

Zeena on Sunday returned to Britain with relatives who had flown out to Annecy in southeastern France to collect her.

Saad al-Hilli, his wife Ikbal, an elderly relative and the two girls had been on a camping holiday on the shores of Lake Annecy when the tragedy happened.

Local cyclist Sylvain Mollier was also killed after apparently stumbling on the scene.

Police on Sunday carried out a second day of searches at the family home at Claygate in southern England.

Hilli, a naturalised Briton of Iraqi origin, worked as a mechanical design engineer with the Surrey Satellite Technology firm.

His brother Said was also interviewed by police in Britain at the weekend after he came forward to deny reports of a financial dispute between the brothers.

The fact that each of the four victims was shot twice in the head has fuelled speculation that the killings were a professional hit.

But police in France say they are considering a range of possibilities.