/ 5 March 2007

Cops rescue girls from underground captivity

Two girls, aged 14 and four, have been rescued after being held in a tiny underground burrow by an alleged serial rapist, South African police said on Monday.

A 31-year-old man arrested near the coastal town of Hermanus in the Western Cape province on Sunday claimed the younger girl was his daughter, police said on Monday. Police have been unable to verify the claim.

The 14-year-old was abducted from a farm in the area in December 2005 but it is not clear how long the younger girl had been kept underground.

”The girls were kept in an underground room on a river bank in the Hemel-op-Aarde [Afrikaans for heaven on earth] Valley,” a police statement said.

The man had been on the run for several months and is linked to at least 21 criminal cases arising from a series of rapes, burglaries and thefts in the Hermanus area over the past year.

There is also one earlier charge of abduction against him, details of which were not immediately available. No charges have yet been levelled against the man in connection with the discovery of the two girls.

”The investigation is at an early stage,” said police spokesperson Inspector Bernadine Steyn.

The girls were found living in a burrow of about 2m by 3m dug out of a river bank. Sheets of corrugated iron supported the roof.

The burrow contained a mattress, food and cooking utensils, clothing and a gas stove.

The girls were described by local newspapers as not emaciated, not visibly hurt and ”quite clean”, but traumatised.

The man was captured on Sunday morning after breaking into a house and being recognised as a wanted suspect. He led police to the two girls.

He is due to appear in court on Tuesday. — AFP

 

AFP