A new twist has emerged in the murder of a British family who were brutally gunned down and executed in the Alps 12 years ago.

Saad Al-Hilli, 50, an Iraq-born satellite engineer from Surrey, was shot dead at the wheel of his BMW on a remote mountain road near Lake Annecy in 2012.

His wife Iqbal, 47, her mother Suhaila, 74, and local cyclist Sylvain Mollier, 45, were also killed in a hail of bullets during the incident, which sent shockwaves throughout Europe.

Saad’s eldest daughter Zainab, seven, was left critically injured after being shot in the shoulder and pistol-whipped, while her four-year-old sister Zeena miraculously survived by cowering under her mother’s lifeless body for hours.

The weapon used to gun down the family is believed to be a semi-automatic pistol of Swiss origin, a Luger PO6/29. 

However, botched probes by French police have meant the killer – feared to be a tourist-hating former Swiss soldier in his 50s – has so far avoided capture. 

Now a new theory has emerged over the identity of the assailant, which points towards a mystery ‘camper’ who pitched a tent near the mass shooting of the Brit family and by the scene of another random tourist murder, where a rare Swiss gun was also used.

The alleged Danish national was staying at a campsite on a rented a pitch in the campsite of Saint-Jorioz, where the Al-Hilli family had set up their caravan from September 1, 2012.

A fresh link has emerged between the murder of British family in the Alps gunned down in this car in September 2012 and the death of a father, who was executed in front of his children a year earlier  

Saad al-Hilli

Surrey businessman Saad al-Hilli, 50, (left) his wife Iqbal, 47, and his mother-in-law Suhaila al-Allaf, 74 (right) died in the September 2012 bloodbath, along with cyclist Sylvian Mollier, 45

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Arriving on September 3, the ‘Dane’ – whose identity cannot be confirmed – left on September 5, the day of the Chevaline massacre. 

French investigators have claimed they have traced the same individual to a campsite less than six miles from the murder scene of another tourist Xavier Baligant, a year earlier. The site is about 300 miles north of where the Brit family was killed

The 29-year-old was shot four times at a rest area near Nancy while he was heading home to Belgium following a camping trip. 

He had stopped for a ‘pee break’ on the night of July 18 to 19, 2011, when his killer sneaked up and assassinated him.  

His two sons Jordan and Dylan, then aged seven and five, were sleeping in his car when their father was slaughtered. They escaped unharmed. 

Mr Baligant’s murder – which appeared to be more like an execution – took place on a rural stretch of road on the A31, just a few miles from the campsite of the ‘Dane’.

His killer, who is still at large, fired five bullets, the first from about 50ft away and the last at point-blank range in the face. 

It’s thought the murderer was armed with a Schmidt-Rubin K31 rifle, a bolt-action weapon provided to the Swiss army in the 1950s and produced in 700,000 copies. 

French investigators have claimed they have traced the same individual to a campsite less than six miles from the murder scene of another tourist Xavier Baligant (pictured) a year earlier.

Mr Baligant is believed to have been killed by someone firing a Schmidt-Rubin K31 rifle (pictured), a bolt-action weapon provided to the Swiss army in the 1950s

Meanwhile, the British Al-Hilli family were slaughtered in a hail of bullets fired from a a Luger PO6/29 – a semi-automatic pistol also of Swiss origin (pictured)

Baffled French detectives claimed the mystery camper was staying nearby on the night of the killings, reports French paper Le Parisien.

This man was therefore present at two murders, a year apart – where rare Swiss weapons were used.

However, it’s not clear whether the ‘camper’ had booked under his own name or whether false details had been provided. 

News of the potential fresh clue came as a Paris cold case unit reopened its investigation into the murders of Mr Al-Hilli and his family. 

Experts have claimed the triggerman behind the murders was ‘a seasoned former soldier, trained in very particular shooting techniques’ by Swiss special forces, who had ‘gone off the rails’, French media reported.

Judge Sabine Kheris of the Nanterre cold case unit is examining one theory that the profile of the killer matches someone trained in deadly shooting techniques taught to members of the elite Swiss counter-terror police force, the Détachement d’Action Rapide et de Dissuasion – or Dard.

Similar techniques are also reportedly taught by two private companies who run ‘assassin courses’ for hand-picked military and civilian personnel, the French paper says. 

Given the calculated execution-style nature of the killings and accuracy of the shoots fired, experts have suggested the likely attacker is a Swiss soldier in his 50s who is very experienced and well-drilled in shooting techniques and would not have been fazed by the screams of his victims.  

Analysts point to a number of pieces of evidence, including that within just 60 to 90 seconds the perpetrator had fired 21 shots.

French police inspect a drain under the road to the murder scene at Cheverlaine near Annecy in the Haute-Savoie region of south-eastern France where the victims of a quadruple murder were discovered. Pictured: September 2012

The three tragic members of the Al-Hilli family were each hit three or four times as they sat in their BMW, which at the time of the killings was parked in a layby on a wooded road above the village of Chevaline.

Cyclist Mr Mollier, who was passing by at the time, was fired at six times. One of the bullets hit his helmet.

Of all the shots, 18 hit their targets, suggesting a perpetrator with ‘extreme composure and great skill in handling a weapon’.

The type of weapon used – a post-war Luger PO6/29 – is not favoured by professional hitmen, as they are known to regularly malfunction and are considered unreliable.

Experts are not able to say with certainly the exact order in which the bullets were shot, but have established the killer would have fired a first magazine with eight rounds, followed by a second and then a third.

However, only five of the third round of bullets were fired. 

It is believed the killer’s gun jammed after the 21st bullet, explaining why Zainab was struck in her head with the butt of a weapon after being hit in the shoulder.

During a closed police reconstruction undertaken at a military base last October in the Paris region, three shooters of differing levels were timed to see how difficult it was to carry out the killings within the short timeframe.

It was found the massacre could only have been undertaken by someone who was very proficient in handling a weapon.

According to the expert, there is also interest around the perpetrator choosing to finish off his victims by shooting at very close range – a technique used in specialised military training, but particularly by counter-terror cops from the Swiss Dard.

All of the victims were struck by one or two bullets to the head fired from just feet away, with experts believing the killer may have even opened the door to the BMW before leaning in and firing. 

Such a technique – reserved for a very niche group of professional shooters – is suggestive of someone who has been specially trained to shoot in this way. 

‘This is something learned in Switzerland, not in France, or the guy is part of a specialised unit,’ he told Le Parisien. 

Investigators believe there is also evidence to suggest the killings were at random rather than pre-conceived. 

The Al-Hillis were on holiday and simply exploring the countryside, while experienced cyclist Mr Mollier is said to have taken this route for the first time when the tragedy occurred.

Detectives also point to the ability of the killer to stay close to his victims, suggesting the perpetrator must have also been constantly moving.

Saad Al-Hilli had attempted to escape the murderer’s clutches by reversing his BMW, leaving an arc in the ground measuring 15 metres, before the car became stuck in the embankment. 

The latest lead comes nearly a month after Mr Al-Hilli’s brother Zaid, 65, accused French police of a ‘diabolical’ cover-up and negligence that hampered one of the most notorious unsolved cases of the century.

The caravan and tent used by Saad al-Hilli and his family while on holiday at the Le Solitaire du Lac campsite on Lake Annecy (File photo)

Zaid, who was once himself named as a suspect by French police but later cleared, said last month: ‘The initial investigation was a complete disaster. Look at the mistakes – were they accidental, or were they part of something bigger? That’s what we need to find out,’ he told The Mirror.

He slammed the original team for contaminating the crime scene, trampling over crucial evidence, and failing to conduct a reconstruction at the time of the murders. 

Instead, a belated reconstruction took place more than a decade later at a disused airfield outside Paris, attended by lawyers and police chiefs.

‘It’s appalling that we’ve had to wait 11 years for them to piece this together,’ he added. ‘What else has been lost or destroyed in that time?,’ he added.

Prosecutors have admitted that a forensics officer accidentally contaminated key evidence with his own DNA, and that the area around the crime scene was inexplicably reopened to the public just 48 hours after the massacre.

The case has been plagued by speculation over possible motives, ranging from Saad’s high-security work in the satellite industry to family disputes over inheritance. 

Zaid himself was arrested by UK police in 2013 on suspicion of conspiracy to murder, following reports of a feud between the brothers. 

He was released six months later without charge.

Other theories have pointed to Sylvain Mollier as the intended target. 

The local father-of-three was reportedly shot first and last, with more bullets than anyone else. 

Former Surrey detective Mark Preston, who worked on the case, told a Channel 4 documentary that the Al-Hilli family may have been innocent bystanders caught in the crossfire of a targeted hit on Mollier.

The reopening of the case has brought fresh hope to Zaid and the families of the victims. 

The inquiry is now being overseen by the Association for Victims of Unsolved Crimes, a new organisation led by ex-police chief Benoît de Maillard, which is reviewing 391 cold cases across France.

Zaid has also hired renowned French lawyer William Bourdon to push for answers, but has admitted his annoyance at the opportunities that had been missed in the early days of the investigation.

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