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- Michael Schumacher is now starting to recognise family, friend says
- Schumacher has yet to recover speech and has 'very limited' movement
- Philippe Streiff claims to have got the update from Schumacher's wife
- Former Formula1 driver's manager has disputed Streiff's comments
Michael Schumacher has started to recognise family members, according to a family friend.
Philippe Streiff, another former F1 driver, told French media that Schumacher ‘has yet to recover the power of speech’ but is ‘nevertheless starting to recognise those close to him’.
Schumacher, 45, suffered severe head injuries in a ski accident in Meribel in the French Alps one year ago today.
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Road to recovery: Michael Schumacher, pictured with his wife Corinna in Italy in 2004, has yet to recover the ability to speak, but recognises family members, a friend has claimed
The former Formula One ace emerged from an induced coma in June, and left hospital in September.
In an interview with Le Parisien, Streiff said he had learned of Schumacher's progress from his wife, Corinna, and his surgeon, Gerard Saillant.
Streiff, claiming to be a 'family friend', said Schumacher, had ‘very limited’ movement but was working on sitting upright, and that ‘long term... he could hope one day to walk with crutches.’
However, Schumacher's manager has disputed the comments, saying Schumacher faces a ‘long fight’ for recovery, and that Streiff is not a family friend.
‘We need a long time. It’s going to be a long time and a hard fight,’ Sabine Kehm said.
Michael Schumacher suffered brain damage after a ski accident in Meribel in December last year
Family friend? Streiff claims he was told of Shumacher's progress by his wife Corinna, left, and with brain specialist Gerard Saillant, pictured right
Schumacher (second right) celebrates on the podium after his 2012 Formula One Grand Prix win in Valencia
Friend: Former racing driver Philippe Streiff made the comments on French radio today
‘He is making progress appropriate to the severity of the situation,’ she added, reiterating a statement she made a month ago.
Ms Kehm said Streiff was not a close friend of Schumacher and that his claims to have had contact with the two people named were ‘factually wrong’.
‘I cannot confirm that (report),’ she said. ‘I can only confirm that I do not know where Mr Streiff has his information from because he has no contact with us and he never has.’
Kehm was forced to make similar denials last month, when Streiff, who is himself wheelchair-bound since following a crash in 1989, commented on Schumacher's health.
Speaking on French Radio, Streiff said: 'It's very difficult. He can't speak. Like me, he is in a wheelchair paralysed. He has memory problems and speech problems.'
Streiff, 59, was seen visiting Schumacher when the German was in intensive care in Grenoble Hospital, France.
Schumacher, a very competent skier, was holidaying with family and friends in Meribel, where he owns a chalet, on December 29, 2013.
He was skiing with his 14-year-old son on a red piste, which is classed for intermediate skiers.
But shortly after 11am he left the piste and skied on to an off-piste area located in between the red run and a blue run, for beginners to intermediates.
It was here that he struck a partially-covered rock. He was not skiing fast but he lost control and catapulted 34 feet on to another rock, severely injuring his head.
After spending several months in a medically induced coma, Schumacher was transferred to Lausanne Hospital, Switzerland, in June and he is now being cared for at his home on the shores of Lake Geneva.
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