Knox
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A previous article said they left due to threats they were receiving.I've never heard of people being hunted after leaving these places. They go because they don't want to live in a war zone.
I watched the video of dads interview and in that interview he said Lina knew how to use the phone to text and use the camera. He also stated in his country when there is a kidnapping it is for money. He was very distraught. MOO
Thanks for sharing. Just goes to show they can disappear in a blink of an eye.This case is giving me panic attacks... My son was 5-6 when we lived with my MIL in her complex temporarily. We were going swimming, and the pool was closed, instead of heading back the way we came, my son laughed and turned left and ran. I was around that corner in seconds and he was gone. I was frantic and knew he couldn't have gotten far, but he was just gone. I ran back to the apt, jumped in the car and started driving through the maze while calling 911. My biggest fear was that anyone could have snatched him up into their apartment, they all look the same. Within a matter of minutes, people at the far end of the complex had seen him running through a parking lot. Just as the police were sending units, MIL called and told me he showed up there. He was hiding from me. I had no idea he would be able to find his way back. That short time of panic took years off my life. Kids can be gone so quickly and you just never know what they are thinking. I'm scared to death for this girl.
I would think that was the case while living in their home country. People are forced to submit to whoever taking power. But it would be quite waste of resources to follow them to the US over it. They isn't much of an economy and they are very busy killing each other in Afghanistan to take on an additional task like that. You get in big trouble if you are caught attempting to defect but once you're gone and accepted into the US you're pretty much home free.A previous article said they left due to threats they were receiving.
I would very much agree with what you posted. That's certainly what we see over here. However, we know nothing about their lives in Afghanistan. And what they did when living there. And I don't know how we would ever know unless someone came forward. I have asked if anyone knows what Lina's father's occupation is in San Antonio, but doesn't seem we have that info either. Just grasping for anything other than a sexually motivated abduction.I would think that was the case while living in their home country. People are forced to submit to whoever taking power. But it would be quite waste of resources to follow them to the US over it. They isn't much of an economy and they are very busy killing each other in Afghanistan to take on an additional task like that. You get in big trouble if you are caught attempting to defect but once you're gone and accepted into the US you're pretty much home free.
I really can't understand why mom didn't follow along on the path behind her.
Though I do respect the person's pride in his culture, the sexual exploitation of minors in Afghanistan and nearby Pakistan has deep roots.In those countries, if someone touches a child, they would believe they would be sent “to hell” so no one dares “to look at them.”
Though I do respect the person's pride in his culture, the sexual exploitation of minors in Afghanistan and nearby Pakistan has deep roots.
Afghanistan paedophile ring may be responsible for abuse of over 500 boys
'Bacha Bazi': The rampant sexual exploitation of young boys in Pakistan and Afghanistan
Child sex abuse in Pakistan's religious schools is endemic
In short, humans are humans and all human societies have criminal elements. I strongly suspect that children are no more and no less safe in the United States than they are in Afghanistan.