Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Children's death probe: man released

James Watson,Pa
Sunday 01 June 2008 09:08 BST
(Getty Images)

A man being questioned in relation to a stabbing attack that killed two children and seriously injured a baby has been released, Scotland Yard said today.

The man, 39, believed to be the children's father, will face no further action in relation to the deaths, police said.

He has been bailed to return to a police station at a later date in relation to another matter, details of which police would not release.

A six-month-old girl remains in a "critical but stable" condition today after she was operated on by surgeons last night.

Her five-year-old brother and a four-year-old sister died in hospital on Friday after being found injured at their home in Carshalton, south-east London.

A 35-year-old woman, believed to be the children's mother, remains under arrest in hospital, where she is being treated for minor injuries.

A spokesman for the Metropolitan Police said officers were called to the house at 10.30pm on Friday night.

"Police and London Ambulance attended and found three children suffering serious injuries, believed to be stab wounds," he said.

"We believe we know the identity of the deceased. However, we await formal identification and confirmation that all family members have been informed."

Post-mortem examinations on the two victims are expected to be carried out early next week.

The two older children were taken to hospital but both died within 90 minutes of the police call. The girl died at 11.41pm and the boy 15 minutes later.

The £300,000 two-bedroom property in Park Lane was taped off today as officers carried out an examination of the scene.

Neighbours said the couple were thought to be from the Tamil areas of Sri Lanka and had moved to the suburb in the last year.

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in