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Woman in Austria cellar incest case rejoins family

ZEILLERN, Austria
Wed Jun 11, 2008 1:13pm EDT

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ZEILLERN, Austria (Reuters) - The eldest child of an incestuous relationship between Austrian Josef Fritzl and the daughter he confined for 24 years has been reunited with her family after recovering from an artificial coma, doctors said.

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Doctors also said on Wednesday the whole family -- Fritzl's daughter Elisabeth and the six surviving of seven children she bore him while locked in a cellar -- had been moved into a house on hospital premises to promote a normal living environment.

Fritzl, 73, in investigative custody since the case was exposed in April, marooned Elisabeth, now 42, in a soundproofed basement under his house in the central town of Amstetten -- a marathon, bizarre ordeal that scandalized the world.

"The reunion of (Elisabeth's eldest daughter) Kerstin with her family a few days ago was a moving moment, and for us the surprising recuperation of Kerstin was a great relief," Berthold Kepplinger, director of the central Austrian hospital where Fritzl's victims have been treated, told a news conference.

Kerstin was expected to make a "full recovery", he said.

The case came to light two months ago after Kerstin fell seriously ill and was brought to the hospital by Fritzl.

Kerstin, 19, who was placed into an artificial coma after she suffered cramping fits due to oxygen deficiency and kidney problems, opened her eyes on May 15. After therapy to restore mobility, she rejoined her family on Sunday, doctors said.

Albert Reiter, the family's doctor, glowingly described how he was able to escort Kerstin into her new home.

"It was an extraordinary moment for me last Sunday when Kerstin, holding my arm, and I were able to walk through the door into a new home, crossing the threshold into a new life," Reiter said at the globally televised news conference.

FAN OF ROBBIE WILLIAMS

After coming out of the medically-induced coma, Kerstin said she wanted most of all to go on a cruise and attend a concert by British pop star Robbie Williams, doctors said.

"When she was still in bed attached to tubes, she listened to Robbie Williams until 3 a.m., until I had to put a bit of a dampener on it," said Reiter. "But that was the point in time where I said we should go ahead with steps to get her mobile."

"The entire family is very happy that they are all together for the first time," said their lawyer, Christoph Herbst.

Three of the seven children of the incestuous liaison, the youngest of whom is now aged five, were incarcerated with their mother, while another three were raised by Fritzl and his wife Rosemarie as their own. One child died shortly after birth.

Prosecutors are investigating Fritzl for coercion, rape, incest and the death of the baby, though he has not been charged. Police say he has admitted incarceration and incest.

Rosemarie is not under suspicion and is with the rest of the family at the residence on the hospital grounds in Amstetten.

The cellar victims are receiving further daily therapy there as well as schooling and other guidance to start preparing them for life in the outside world.

Kepplinger said Kerstin's immune system still had to bolstered with belated vaccines already administered to other family members kept underground for over two decades.

Herbst said Elisabeth did not plan to discuss the case in public and urged a curious international media to let the family build a normal life in privacy.

(Writing by Mark Heinrich; Editing by Catherine Evans)



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