In India, where there are many cases of children getting lost and missing, in 2010, a pair of siblings who got lost and were unable to return to their home were reunited with their mother for the first time in 13 years with the help of human rights activists. , has become a hot topic as a miracle story.

In June 2010, her older sister, Rakhi, who was 11 years old, and her younger brother, Babul, who was 7 years old, lived in Agra, in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh. I left my house to go home.



However, they got lost and took a long-distance train from their local station, arriving in a town about 250 kilometers away.



Although the two were handed over to the police, they were unable to return to their homes because they did not remember their addresses, and were taken to different nursing homes.



Although the government did not respond sympathetically, a human rights activist who works to protect victims of human trafficking used her name to locate her mother, and in December last year, the couple visited her for the first time in 13 years. I was reunited with my mother.



When her younger brother Babul returned home, a video showed her mother hugging him in tears, saying, ``Thank God, all my wishes have come true.'' In India, it is talked about as a miracle story.



In India, there are many cases of children becoming victims of human trafficking or going missing due to getting lost, and human rights activists say that ``police and government must work together to provide support.'' I am.