Yorkshire Post

Parents to sue Malaysian resort owner after daughter’s jungle death

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THE FAMILY of a London teenager found dead after she disappeare­d from a Malaysian nature resort last year is suing the site’s owner for alleged negligence and has urged the government to hold an inquest to determine what happened to her.

Nora Anne Quoirin’s disappeara­nce from her family’s cottage at the Dusun eco-resort, on August 4 last year, sparked a massive search operation. Her naked body was discovered on August 13 about 1.6 miles from the resort.

Police have said there was no sign the 15-year-old had been abducted or raped, with a preliminar­y post-mortem investigat­ion showing that she succumbed to intestinal bleeding due to starvation and stress.

Sankara Nair, a lawyer for Nora’s parents Meabh and Sebastien Quoirin, said the family strongly believed Nora was abducted as she has mental and physical disabiliti­es and could not have wandered off on her own.

The lawsuit says a cottage window was found ajar, with its latch broken, on the morning she disappeare­d. The resort gate was left open at all times without any security and there was no surveillan­ce camera except for the reception area.

Nora needed help to walk, and her mental age was about five or six years old, her parents said.

Mr Sankara said: “The place was not safe for the child because of the negligence. Anybody could have come in and taken the child.”

Nora’s French-Irish parents are seeking more than 180,000 ringgit (£34,000) over losses, bereavemen­t costs and damages for pain and suffering from the resort owner, Helen Marion Todd.

Her lawyers were not immediatel­y available for comment.

Mr Sankara said the family has asked Malaysia’s attorney-general to launch an inquest because the post-mortem inquiry would not include what happened to Nora before her death.

Police have said a complete post-mortem report will be released soon. The Lucie Blackman Trust, a charity which helps British families in crisis overseas, said: “It is crucial to understand how Nora came to be found where she was. As a vulnerable child, we strongly refute any conclusion that Nora was alone for the entire duration of her disappeara­nce.”

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