Current Bodies of Two Sisters as Saudi Foreign Nationals Found in Canterbury Apartment - NSW

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NSW Police have confirmed that the bodies of Asra Abdullah Alsehli, 24, and Amaal, 23, have been returned to the Kingdom. They could not advise when exactly this occurred.
Their investigation into the deaths of the two women — whose decomposing bodies
were found at the unit they rented in Canterbury in Sydney's south-west
— is ongoing.

It comes as SBS News understands that a second toxicology report has been ordered as the investigation continues, and that the coronial report is not yet close to completion.

 

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“Two Saudi Arabian sisters found dead inside their Sydney unit died in a suspected suicide pact after they were cut off from their family months earlier, police have claimed.

Police believe the pair remained holed up inside the apartment from late February - shortly after they stopped receiving money - until early April when they died, the Daily Telegraph reported.

Toxicology reports - which were ultimately inconclusive - found unusual levels of sodium, nitrate and fluoride in the apartment, with a report claiming police 'strongly' believe the sisters died as a result of a suicide pact.

'There was a stream of money coming to them from their (family) that stopped in February,' one source told the Daily Telegraph. 'Now, we don't know why it stopped, but it seems there had been some sort of a fall out with their family overseas.

'After that, they cut off communications with everybody.'

The new claims are contained in a police report to the coroner.”

 
the Daily Telegraph reported.
Not sure why this made the front page of the Daily Telegraph today, other than to further hose down any speculation on what might have happened with this sad case.

Publishing those headlines as official (Police) findings, when the Coroner has not yet made their official findings, is what it is.

The article concludes with
'It is now the NSW coroner’s job to determine an official cause of death.
But sources hold little hope the coroner would be able to shed any more light on the sad deaths than police.'


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