DNA testing leads to child murder case breakthrough

French prosecutors arrest parents over death of ‘little martyr of the A10’ in 1987

Halima Touloub is transported from a courthouse in Blois, France. Photograph:  Guillaume Souvant/AFP/Getty Images
Halima Touloub is transported from a courthouse in Blois, France. Photograph: Guillaume Souvant/AFP/Getty Images

The parents of a four-year-old girl found murdered three decades ago have been handed preliminary murder charges in a cold case resurrected by DNA testing, a French prosecutor said.

The girl's body was found in a ditch along the A10 freeway close to the city of Blois in central France in August 1987.

The girl, whose mutilated body had marks of long-term abuse, was known in France as the “little martyr of the A10”. Her photo was circulated to authorities in 30 countries across the world.

Blois prosecutor Frederic Chevallier said that a breakthrough has been possible in the case, which baffled authorities for years, "because of the evolution of science and DNA".

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The parents, Ahmed and Halima Touloub, who are both in their 60s, were identified and tracked by chance through their son’s DNA, which was tested in an unrelated 2016 case and matched him as the dead girl’s brother, Mr Chevallier said.

The parents were arrested by French authorities on Tuesday.

The girl was born in July 1983 in Casablanca, Morocco, and was the third of seven children.

The father said he was “relieved” that he had been arrested and that “he was scared of his wife and lived under her domination”, Mr Chevallier said.

The mother gave an erratic account to authorities, claiming at one point that the girl was still alive, Mr Chevallier added. – AP