• Sat. Apr 20th, 2024

Siblings Suffocate To Death, After Climbing into A family Heirloom Chest

Byfadila yunusa

Sep 22, 2021 #Boy, #Siblings

A brother and sister aged just seven and 10 have died after climbing into a chest that closed on top of them.

Anna and Mikhail Presnov are believed to have climbed into the family heirloom and suffocated after a latch closed preventing them from opening the heavy lid.

The tragic siblings were home alone in the village of Mykilske when their parents went to dig potatoes as seasonal workers about 18 miles away.

Parents Svetlana Presnova, 35, and Stanislav Presnov, 41, say they spoke to their children at 10am but an hour later, they did not answer the phone.

Brother and sister, 7 and 10, die after chest closes on top of them while they were home alone

Rather than raise the alarm to alert neighbors, they waited for their bus home later in the afternoon and began searching for the missing girl and boy when they got home.

Stanislav said: “I took a bicycle, Svetlana went on foot along the nearby streets looking for them, but there were no signs of them.”

A police sniffer dog eventually directed officers back into the family home, where the police found the bodies inside the antique wooden chest that had been passed from generation to generation in the family, originally as a dowry.

Police in Ukraine have not ruled out foul play and have launched a murder probe.

A statement from the National Police in Ukraine said: “During a search of the house, the children were found in an old chest with no signs of life

“The forensic service is currently working at the scene.

“The circumstances are being established. Police are considering all versions of the deaths of the brother and sister.”

Dad Stanislav said: “Police say it was most likely an accident. They got inside, the chest closed and they suffocated.

“There is a bracket through which to put a padlock. The latch might close in a way they could not open it from the inside.

“But the point is that they could have lifted the lid so there was a gap for air.”