World

A person has been arrested in the unsolved case of three members of a British family and a cyclist shot dead in the French Alps more than nine years ago.

Saad al Hilli, 50, was killed with his wife Iqbal, 47, and mother-in-law Suhaila al Allaf, 74, near Lake Annecy on 5 September 2012.

A gunman sprayed their BMW with bullets at point-blank range in a lay-by.

French cyclist Sylvain Mollier, 45, also died after being shot seven times.

Mr and Mrs al Hillis’ young daughters survived.

Zeena, four, hid for hours in the footwell under her dead mother’s legs, while her sister, Zainab, seven, was shot in the shoulder and beaten in the head. She was found stumbling along the road.

The Surrey family were on a camping trip in the country.

More from World

In 2013, Eric Maillaud, then prosecutor on the case, concluded: “We are dealing with a very experienced gunman.”

The prosecutor in Annecy said on Wednesday morning that an arrest had been made, and French media reported house searches were taking place and alibis checked.

Police have been unsure whether the al Hillis or Mr Mollier, who worked in the nuclear industry, was the target.

No one has ever been charged with the murders, which prompted a search of the family’s home in Claygate, Surrey.

In 2020, the al Hillis’ daughters were set to be re-interviewed about the murder of their family.

Investigators then returned to examine the scene of the murders, near the village of Chevaline, in October 2021.

Police were also last year investigating a possible link with a gang of contract killers living in Paris.

One of the gang was found to have pistol rounds similar to the ones fired from the gun that killed the victims.

Articles You May Like

Officers face criminal investigation after pregnant woman and baby killed in crash with police car
Jeep launches Wagoneer S EV lease prices starting at just $599 per month
News or noise? Orioles move in fences, Yankees protect Caleb Durbin
FTX co-founder Gary Wang avoids prison time for role in crypto fraud
Energy price cap rises again – with cost of bills expected to stay high for months