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An Austrian girl held prisoner in a cellar for eight years was reunited with her parents last night after making a dramatic dash for freedom.
Police searching for a man suspected of kidnapping Natascha Kampusch and
holding her prisoner said that the alleged kidnapper had committed suicide
late last night by jumping in front of a train.
Natascha vanished on March 2, 1998, while walking to school in Vienna. She was
10 years old at the time. She reappeared yesterday after leaping out of a
black BMW when it was stopped in a routine police roadcheck.
The BMW was caught in traffic in the Deutsch Wagram suburb of the Austrian
capital. The delay had been caused by a police routine roadside check a
short distance ahead.
Austrian television said that other motorists had raised the alarm when a girl
ran from the car and was then seen apparently in some distress in the garden
of a house where officers who came to investigate had found her.
Last night Erich Zwettler, a spokesman for Vienna police, confirmed that the
teenage girl was “with 98 per cent certainty” Natascha Kampusch, although a
DNA test was being carried out. He said that the tests had included an “age
progression test” that had been used on pictures of the girl to show how she
would look today, and she also been asked questions that only the real
Natascha would be able to answer.
Her father, Ludwig Koch, said that he was “overcome” after being told that his
daughter had been found. “I can’t believe that after eight desperate years
my daughter is finally coming home. If it is true it will be the greatest
thing that could possibly be,” he said.
Herr Koch and Natascha’s mother were at the secure location where the teenager
was being kept.
Herr Zwettler said that police had chased the BMW across the city but had lost
it. It was later found abandoned in a Vienna wood, and the numberplate had
been traced to a house in the Donaustadt area of Vienna, which was found
abandoned after a police raid.
Last night the house was surrounded by police, and neighbouring homes were
evacuated after the teenage girl said that the man had told her that it
would explode if he was ever caught. She said that he had not wanted any
evidence left to incriminate him.
Bomb disposal squad experts were reported to be at the scene as well as dogs
trained to detect explosives. Border control points had also been placed on
alert for the 44-year-old man — known only as Wolfgang P. — who is from
Lower Austria. It was also revealed that the suspect was someone “who was
known to police”.
Police sources said that the alleged kidnapper committed suicide late last
night by jumping in front of a train in Vienna, Austrian television said.
The teenager said that she had occasionally been allowed out of the cellar and
had been receiving schooling from her captor, and was able to read and
write.
Asked why Natascha had not tried to escape in the past, Herr Zwettler said she
appeared to have had “Stockholm Syndrome” — a psychological condition in
which long-held captives begin to identify with their captors.
Another police source said: “She is white, pale-looking, as if she had been
out of the light of day for a long time, but she articulated well.”
Adolf Brenner, the chief of police in Deutsch Wagram, where the teenager was
taken after being found, said that she seemed to be in good spirits despite
her ordeal but repeatedly said how happy she was to have been freed.
“He seems to have made great efforts to keep her away from the outside world,”
he said. “She was allowed limited access to the television and radio, and
sometimes she was given videos.”
Austrian media reported that the girl had told police that she had been
sexually abused and police were investigating her claims, but the motive for
the kidnapping remained unclear.
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