Kuwait Times

Notorious Australian serial killer Milat dies

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SYDNEY: Australia’s most notorious serial killer Ivan Milat, whose murder of seven young backpacker­s in the 1990s terrified the country, has died in hospital, officials said yesterday. Milat was serving consecutiv­e life sentences for the brutal killing spree took place near Sydney between 1989 and 1992. A spokeswoma­n for Corrective Services New South Wales said in a statement that the 74year-old died at Long Bay Hospital at 4:07 am yesterday.

He was diagnosed with terminal stomach and oesophagus cancer in May and had been in hospital to receive pain relief since October 11, according to national broadcaste­r ABC. His seven confirmed victims were Britons Caroline Clarke, 21, and Joanne Walters, 22, Australian­s James Gibson and Deborah Everist, both 19, and German backpacker­s Simone Schmidl, 21, Anja Habschied, 20, and Gabor Neugebauer, 21.

In each case, he had offered the young hitchhiker­s a lift, stabbed or shot them in thrill killings and buried the bodies in shallow graves in a forest in the NSW southern highlands. Milat was arrested in 1994 following one of Australia’s biggest police investigat­ions, which was sparked by the discovery of the bodies in 1992 and 1993. He was convicted of the murders in 1996, as well as of the abduction of another traveller who escaped, but denied having a role in the crimes.

Milat was also a major suspect in the murders of three other women who went missing in the state’s Hunter region a decade before he began the killings for which he was jailed. Leanne Beth Goodall, Robyn Elizabeth Hickie and Amanda Therese Robinson disappeare­d in 1978 and 1979. Their bodies were never found. Milat admitted that he had worked as a roadman in the area during the late 1970s but denied involvemen­t in the three murders. Australia is a popular destinatio­n for young backpacker­s, with more than 600,000 touring the country every year.

 ?? —AFP ?? SYDNEY: Ivan Milat, who was sentenced to life imprisonme­nt last July for the murders of seven backpacker­s, is shown in an undated photograph with a rifle and pistol and a favorite cowboy hat.
—AFP SYDNEY: Ivan Milat, who was sentenced to life imprisonme­nt last July for the murders of seven backpacker­s, is shown in an undated photograph with a rifle and pistol and a favorite cowboy hat.

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