< %=imgalt%>
US Elections Calendar ~ Barak Obama ~ Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry ~ Other International News
Home / International News / 2008 / May 2008 / May 15, 2008
Dungeon dads family thanks public for support

Top News

Praja Rajyam decides to approach court to vacate the stay on roadshows

Intelligence ,security failures caused Mumbai attacks:Chidambaram

Parents sue school over cheerleaders nude photo suspension row

Ledgers spooky SoHo apartment fails to attract tenants

An American based company sets eyes on expansion in India

Michael Clarkes gift for fiancée Lara Bingle - Aston Martin car

Logitech has made its one-billionth computer mouse

Tobacco smoke can trigger behavioural problems in asthmatic boys

Dungeon dads family thanks public for support

Weeks after Josef Fritzls crime surfaced, his family has for the first time expressed gratitude for the support they have received - and to wish for a normal life in the future.

London, May 15 : Weeks after Josef Fritzl's crime surfaced, his family has for the first time expressed gratitude for the support they have received - and to wish for a "normal life" in the future.

Elisabeth, 42, who was kept as a sex slave in a purpose-built subterranean dungeon by her rapist father Josef and the six children he fathered with her during his continuous sexual assaults, have prepared a hand-written poster illustrated with colourful drawings to thank everyone for the support they have been receiving since they were freed by police on April 26.

They also wished Kerstin, 19, Elisabeth's oldest daughter who is being treated for a mysterious illness, a quick recovery, and expressed their longing to return to normal life.

"We, the whole family, would like to use this opportunity to thank you all for sympathizing with our fate. Your empathy is helping us to go through these difficult times and it shows us that there also are good and honest people," the Telegraph quoted them, as saying.

"We hope that there will be a time when we can return to normal life," they added.

The family, including Fritzl's wife Rosemarie, 68, prepared the poster together and illustrated with colourful drawings of rainbows, hearts, smiling faces and traces of their hands, as part of their collective therapy at a local psychiatric clinic.

The notes were displayed in a window at the main square of their hometown Amstetten.

In a text written within an open pair of hands, Elisabeth wrote: "I wish for: the recovery of my daughter Kerstin, the love of my children, the protection of my family, for people with a big heart and compassion."

In a similar note, her daughter Lisa, 15, wrote in red ink: "I wish for: health; that everything goes well; love and happiness. I miss: Kerstin, my school and my friends."

ANI

December 5, 2008

December 4, 2008

December 3, 2008

December 2, 2008

December 1, 2008

November 30, 2008