Bangkok Post

Girl’s Malaysia death ruled ‘misadventu­re’

Family dismayed as foul play dismissed

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KUALA LUMPUR: A French-Irish teenager with learning difficulti­es died by “misadventu­re” after disappeari­ng in the Malaysian jungle on a family holiday and no one else was involved, a coroner ruled yesterday.

The mother of Nora Quoirin, watching proceeding­s online, bowed her head as the verdict was delivered, with the coroner also saying there was no sign the 15-year-old had been murdered or sexually assaulted.

The teen’s body was discovered after a massive hunt through the rainforest following her disappeara­nce from a resort outside Kuala Lumpur in 2019.

Police insisted there was no foul play and a post-mortem conducted in Malaysia found that she probably starved and died of internal bleeding after days in the jungle.

Her parents thought she had been abducted, saying she would never have climbed out of the window of the chalet where they were staying in the dead of night, as authoritie­s believe.

However, following an inquest in Malaysia, Coroner Maimoonah Aid ruled she died by “misadventu­re”.

“After hearing all the relevant evidence, I rule that there was no one involved in the death of Nora Anne,” she told a court in the city of Seremban. “It is more probable than not that she died by misadventu­re.”

The teen likely left the family accommodat­ion “on her own and subsequent­ly got lost,” she said, handing down her ruling online due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The schoolgirl’s body was found in a stream near the resort after a 10-day hunt that included hundreds of rescuers, helicopter­s and sniffer dogs.

The coroner took two hours to deliver her verdict, going through the evidence from more than 40 witnesses that was presented during the inquest from August to December.

As well as saying there was no evidence to support the theories of homicide or sexual assault, she decided against an “open verdict”, something the teen’s family had pushed for.

Instead, the coroner focused on the fact the family were likely exhausted after a long journey from the UK and activities at the Dusun resort on the day of their arrival in August, 2019.

“The family [were] all jet-lagged and tired,” she said. “Nora Anne had also shown her level of tiredness increase.”

This made it likely that the teen, in a “strange and new place”, had wandered out of the London-based family’s accommodat­ion of her own accord on their first night at the resort, she said.

Ms Aid also noted the teenager’s mother had said she was capable of climbing stairs on her own, suggesting she could have got out of their chalet by herself.

During the inquest, the teen’s parents said they heard mysterious “muffled noises” coming from the accommodat­ion on the night in question, fuelling their belief she was snatched.

In their testimony, police reiterated their view the girl had wandered off alone and defended their approach, insisting a thorough search had been conducted.

The parents, who testified via videolink from Britain, painted a different picture, strongly criticisin­g authoritie­s for their response to their daughter’s disappeara­nce. The five-hectare resort is next to a patch of thick jungle and in the foothills of a mountain range.

The teen had a condition known as holoprosen­cephaly, where the brain fails to develop normally. She had limited verbal communicat­ion and could only write a few words.

 ?? AFP ?? A police officer holds a leaflet bearing a portrait of Nora Quoirin at a checkpoint during a search and rescue operation.
AFP A police officer holds a leaflet bearing a portrait of Nora Quoirin at a checkpoint during a search and rescue operation.

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