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November 10, 2014

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Boy missing 6 days found in IKEA

A 12-YEAR-OLD boy who went missing after being told off by his mother last Monday was found by police yesterday afternoon in an IKEA store in Xuhui District.

Peng Yijian, who is said to have survived on supermarket free samples while missing, is now being treated in hospital.

Because Yijian’s very weak with hunger, he’s receiving an intravenous drip in hospital, his mother, surnamed Liu, told Shanghai Daily last night.

His father, surnamed Peng, said his son has hung about in the city during the six-day period he was missing.

When he felt hungry, he went to supermarkets and took some free food samples they offer, said Peng.

The couple said they appreciated the help of local police, local media and kind-hearted residents in finding their son.

And they promised to ensure that they have better communications with Yijian in the future.

After he was reported missing last Tuesday, police checked surveillance camera footage around his home from the previous day, said Sun Miao, a police officer in Xuhui District.

In the footage, officers spotted him wandering around Shanghai South Railway Station.

Then when they checked Tuesday’s video footage, police saw the boy at a nearby Carrefour outlet.

“We thought there might be other places he likes to visit, so we asked his mother. She gave us eight or nine names, including Caoxi Park, Nanfang Shopping Mall, In Center and IKEA,” Sun said.

Officers were dispatched and the boy was spotted by a surveillance camera at the IKEA outlet on Caoxi Road yesterday — 3 kilometers from the Carrefour sighting.

After a 40-minute hunt, during which exits were blocked, police found Yijian near an escalator on the ground floor.

The 7th-grade pupil at Shanghai Longyuan Middle School in Xuhui ran away from his home on Binnan Road about 12:15pm last Monday.

His mother Liu said she’d received a call from his school that morning and was told by a teacher that as her son hadn’t done his mathematics assignment he was being sent home.

Liu admitted shouting at her son when he got home, which led to him leaving home with just 1.5 yuan (25 US cents) in his pocket.

The family originally hail from Shanxi Province, but have lived in Shanghai since 2003.

Liu said her son had run away before, but never for so long.




 

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