Sarah Groves murder: suspect ‘suffering from paranoia’

Syed Ahmed Shoda, the houseboat owner’s son and friend of the victim, claimed
Mr de Wit told him “there is no reason (why I killed her), I just killed
her”.

In a video posted on YouTube from Zurich in December last year, Mr de Wit said
he had been receiving treatment from psychologists but believed that they
had been acting on behalf of the security services and other government
departments to spy on him and others. He described himself as married to a
“dark-skinned woman” with children, one of whom was doing very well at
school.

The psychologist, from the government’s health department, had put drugs in
his tea to make him impotent after he had said he wanted to become a sperm
donor, while members of the security services had put a GPS tracker under
his scooter to monitor his movements, he claimed.

As a young man he had joined Holland’s Central Democrats, a nationalist,
anti-immigration political party, after he was attacked by Moroccans, and
had won a seat for the party in an election, he claimed.

He said he had been visited by intelligence agents who believed he was a
far-Right republican who posed a threat to Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands.

“The last conversation was January 19 this year [2012]. She said, ‘I have
filled in all these forms and I put your signature below it. I falsified it.
You’re dangerous, you have to be imprisoned. We don’t want you to go abroad,
being in a foreign country while writing all sorts of stuff on the internet.
You have to disappear.’ Of course that scared me enormously.”

It is unclear who the ‘she’ was that Mr de Wit was referring to.

Dr Farida Noor, the head of forensic medicine at Srinagar’s General Medical
College, disclosed that of the 45 cuts on Ms Groves’ body, 43 were “defence
wounds” to her fingers, hands and arms.

“Two of the wounds were fatal, one on her neck and the other pierced her lung.
The cause of death was haemorrhage, but all the rest of the injuries were
defence wounds. she tried to save herself.

“There were wounds on her hands and fingers, trying to catch the blade. She
tried to defend herself by putting up her arm.

“She tried to catch hold of the weapon in her hands, she raised her arms to
defend herself. I think she would have fought bravely.”

Source Article from http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/568301/s/2a7aac30/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cnews0Cworldnews0Casia0Cindia0C99798230CSarah0EGroves0Emurder0Esuspect0Esuffering0Efrom0Eparanoia0Bhtml/story01.htm

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