5/04/2012
AFP
DNA tests have confirmed that the remains of five people
found in a submerged car in Cambodia in January are those of a Frenchman
and his four young children, embassy officials said Thursday.
The Cambodian government has agreed to send the skeletal remains to
France for “additional examination” by forensics experts, the French
embassy in Phnom Penh said in a statement.
No cause of death has been determined yet for widower Laurent Vallier, 42, and his young children.
The family’s badly decomposed bodies were discovered inside Vallier’s
white 4×4 vehicle after it was retrieved from a large pond behind his
house in southern Kampong Speu province on January 14.
“We are still investigating the case,” provincial police chief Keo Pisey told AFP.
Judicial inquiries into the deaths have been launched in France and Cambodia.
Vallier and his two sons and two daughters, thought to have been aged
from two to nine, had been missing since September. Vallier’s Cambodian
wife died in childbirth in 2009.
“I believe my son-in-law and my grandchildren would not have committed suicide. I believe they were murdered,” the late Frenchman’s Cambodian father-in-law Tith Chhuon told AFP.
“I would also like to appeal to authorities and the holy spirits to find justice for them.”
Vallier, who according to his relatives worked as a tour guide, is
understood to have moved from France to Cambodia around 12 years ago,
arriving in Kampong Speu in 2007.
When police pulled his car out of the water they said they found
several bones inside an open suitcase, having apparently drifted in
there over time as the vehicle is thought to have lain submerged for
weeks.
An urn was also among the items recovered from the muddied car and
relatives said it appeared to be the same one that contained the ashes
of Vallier’s wife.
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