By Michael Leidig in Vienna
Last Updated: 10:12PM BST 09/06/2008
Kerstin Fritzl, who was held captive by her father in a dungeon in
Austria, has woken from a seven-week coma and been reunited with her
mother and the rest of her family at a secure medical ward.
Kerstin, along with her mother Elisabeth and two brothers, was
imprisoned from birth by her father Josef Fritzl
Doctors were unsure how Kerstin - who had only ever seen her mother
Elisabeth and two brothers, as well as her father, Josef Fritzl - would
react when she woke from her coma and were keen to make sure the family
was reunited as soon as she became conscious.
Kerstin, 19, was allowed out of the dungeon on April 19 after falling
gravely ill, triggering a series of events which led to her mother
Elisabeth, 42, and two other imprisoned brothers, Felix, 5, and Stefan,
18, being released from the cramped cellar under their home in Amstetten.
She had become desperately sick, probably because she had suffered a life
without fresh air, light, exercise or a good diet. In a rare act of
mercy, Fritzl, 73, chose to release her and take her to hospital after
she collapsed in his underground lair.
Doctors made an appeal on national television to find her mother, who,
Fritzl claimed, had run off to a sect. Police visited Fritzl's home and
discovered his secret "second family".
None of the three children held underground had ever seen daylight
before. They were released to be reunited with their three other siblings
- Lisa, 16, Monika, 14, and Alexander, 12 - who were living above ground
after being taken in by Fritzl on the pretence they had been abandoned.
Doctors put Kerstin into an induced coma to allow her to recover and have
been preparing for her to wake to an entirely new life.
As soon as it was clear she was awake they moved her as fast as possible
to be reunited with her mother and brother's in a special room designed
to recreate the cellar environment at the Amstetten-Mauer clinic.
Rumours spread yesterday that she had recovered from her coma and were
later confirmed by hospital authorities.
According to the Austrian Broadcasting Corporation ORF's Lower Austrian
regional studio, the teenager was transferred to her mother's side before
the move was made public.
This would mean Kerstin has met her mother Elisabeth for the first time
outside the dungeon. There was no further information about her health.
She would also, for the first time, be aware that people outside her
family existed.
Medics feared Kerstin - the first child born to Elisabeth during her 24
years in captivity - would die when she suffered multiple organ failure
and was hooked up to a life support machine. Last month, there were
unconfirmed reports she had showed flickers of life and at one point had
opened her eyes.
It was also reported that police will quiz Kerstin on whether Fritzl
sexually abused her, and will also quiz her brothers about their ordeal
underground.
Elisabeth, who had been imprisoned by Fritzl as a sex slave since she was
18, is on the mend with her five other children in a separate clinic near
the hospital. Her mother, Rosemarie, 69, has also gathered strength after
health problems sparked by the discovery of her husband's "second
family". The family recently symbolised Kerstin's presence by
circling her name with a heart in a poster of personal messages which was
released to the public.
The family are expected to stay in their clinic for several months while
doctors and counsellors prepare them for the outside world.