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Offensive Facebook pages removed
Two Facebook pages containing demeaning comments about women have been
taken down as the Australian Defence Force
continues to investigate whether any of its members were involved.
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Girl, 4, hid under bodies of slain family
French police say three of the four victims of a shooting in the Alps were British tourists. (AAP)
A four-year-old girl hid under the bodies of her murdered mother and grandmother for eight hours in a mysterious shooting of four people in the French Alps.
A four-year-old girl miraculously survived a shooting in the French Alps that left four people dead by curling up under the bullet-riddled corpses of her mother and grandmother.
The little girl spent eight hours concealed on the back seat of her family's BMW estate following a mysterious and brutal gun attack which also left her elder sister seriously injured and killed a passer-by.
Her father, who was found dead in the driver's seat, was identified on Thursday as Saad al-Hilli, a 50-year-old born in Baghdad but resident in Claygate, Surrey, in London's commuter belt.
The fourth man who died is believed to be a local who happened to be cycling past the scene of the crime.
The girl's elder sister, who was found shot next to the car, was in a serious but stable condition in hospital after being flown by helicopter to the nearby city of Grenoble.
Eric Maillaud, the prosecutor in charge of the investigation, said the wounded sister had been placed in an induced coma ahead of further surgery.
He said the girl's life was not in danger but revealed that she had been shot in the shoulder and suffered "extremely violent" blows to the head during Wednesday's attack.
Maillaud said the four-year-old had emerged unscathed.
"She stayed, curled up under the bodies for eight hours and didn't move in all that time," he said.
The first police to arrive on the scene did not spot the girl and, with the car being left untouched and the area sealed off pending the arrival of forensic experts, she was left to endure a traumatic ordeal until she was finally discovered around midnight on Wednesday.
"It was only once we had access to the scene of the crime that we found her," Maillaud said.
"The little girl spoke English. She heard noises, shouts but she can't tell us any more than that. She is only four years old.
"She is being looked after and we are doing everything we possibly can to care for her."
The family had been staying at the nearby Saint Jorioz camp site, where fellow campers who reported their disappearance on Wednesday evening had described them as being of Middle Eastern appearance.
A sense of shock pervaded the three-star Le Solitaire du Lac site on Thursday as campers struggled to come to terms with the shocking assault.
"It's difficult to understand that something like this has taken place in a holiday site," said Frenchman Jean-Claude Guillamet.
"It's created a chill, one can see that people here are very moved."
French authorities said the victims were discovered by a passing cyclist around 3.50pm local time on Wednesday. The cyclist who was killed had overtaken him minutes earlier.
Several witnesses reported seeing a car speeding away from the scene around the time the attack took place.
Experts from the national gendarmerie's IRCGN unit collected DNA evidence from the scene and were checking spent bullet cartridges in an attempt to identify the weapons used.
Local police defended the decisions that led to the four-year-old being left in the car for so long.
"We had instructions not to enter the car and not to move the bodies," Lieutenant-Colonel Benoit Vinnemann of the local gendarmerie told AFP.
The gendarmes were unable to open the doors of the family's BMW for fear that bullet-pierced windows would shatter, potentially compromising the work of the IRCGN forensic team.
"Firemen, technicians and doctors all looked into the car through the holes in the windows but none of them saw the girl," Vinnemann added.
A helicopter equipped with a thermal camera took images of the car to check if there were any other bodies inside, but also failed to identify the girl. "She was so close to her mother they appeared as one mass," said Vinnemann.
In London, a plainclothes policewoman stood outside the suspected home of the family on Thursday.
The policewoman was posted outside the spacious detached house in a leafy residential district of Surrey, southwest of London, while a Surrey police spokeswoman said the force was assisting French authorities in the investigation.
Outside the family home on Thursday, postman Gary Standford said Hilli had "seemed a pleasant man".
"He'd been living here for about three years," Standford said.
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