Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Relatives Of Missing 5-Year-Old Syrian Girl Seek Help After Photo Appears Online

The Canadian Press, 25 May, 2016 12:38 PM
    HALIFAX — Canadian relatives of a missing, five-year-old Syrian girl are appealing for help after a mysterious photograph surfaced on the Internet, suggesting she may have been the only member of her family to survive a bid to escape the war-ravaged country.
     
    Mohamed Masalmeh, a cousin of the dark-haired girl, says he's sure the photo shows Mira Akram Al Jawabrah after she was rescued from a boat that overturned off the coast of Italy in August 2014, when the girl was three years old.
     
    Relatives were initially told Mira, her parents and three younger siblings — Yousef, Mahmoud and Maria — had drowned as they were making their way from Libya to Italy at that time, said Masalmeh, a friend of the girl's father and uncle.
     
    The boat had more than 500 refugees aboard when it sank in the Mediterranean, he said. About 200 disappeared.
     
    "We completely lost contact with them, and we didn't know if they were alive or not," he said in an interview Wednesday. "We assumed that everybody was dead."
     
    However, relatives later spotted the girl's picture among a series of photos on a Syrian news website showing survivors from the capsizing, he said.
     
    "They had hope that she was still alive, and the picture proved that she was still alive," he said.
     
    In the photo, the girl is holding at white card with the number 268 on it.
     
    A longtime resident of Halifax, Masalmeh said he's not sure who took the photo, and he says subsequent requests for information from the Red Cross, the Italian government and police have yielded no useful information.
     
    The girl has an aunt living in Kitchener, Ont., and a grandmother living in Jordan, but Masalmeh says the family has had no luck making phone calls and submitting paperwork through official channels.
     
    "They wouldn't even identify that the girl was there," he said.
     
    "They wouldn't admit that the girl was still alive, even though we saw her picture there. They didn't want to release any information ... I don't know if it's just bureaucracy or they just don't know where she is. There must be a way to track her down."
     
    The girl, originally from the Syrian city of Daraa, may have been unofficially adopted by a Syrian family that survived the capsizing, Masalmeh said.
     
     "People (there) don't have paperwork. They could have named her anything." 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Rachel Notley Gets Kudos On Fort McMurray Fire Handling, But Hard Work Just Beginning

    Alberta Premier Rachel Notley is getting high marks for leadership in handling the Fort McMurray wildfire crisis, but political observers say the disaster remains a dicey political proposition with limited upside and a lot of downside.

    Rachel Notley Gets Kudos On Fort McMurray Fire Handling, But Hard Work Just Beginning

    Transport Minister Marc Garneau To Unveil Renewed Campaign Against Pointing Lasers At Planes

    Transport Minister Marc Garneau To Unveil Renewed Campaign Against Pointing Lasers At Planes
    The federal government is set to launch a social media campaign to shine a light on the ongoing problem of people pointing lasers at planes.

    Transport Minister Marc Garneau To Unveil Renewed Campaign Against Pointing Lasers At Planes

    Retired Police Officers Warn Quebec Against Starting Costly Gun Registry

    Retired Police Officers Warn Quebec Against Starting Costly Gun Registry
    "If you have that in front of you, you can take a decision more quickly," said Brisebois, who retired in 2006 after 30 years on the force. "We were happy to have that info."

    Retired Police Officers Warn Quebec Against Starting Costly Gun Registry

    Little If Any Heroin Left In Vancouver, All Fentanyl: Drug Advocates

    "Traditionally, heroin comes in about four different colours," said the longtime drug advocate, describing a bland palette of beiges, browns and blacks.

    Little If Any Heroin Left In Vancouver, All Fentanyl: Drug Advocates

    Evacuated Twice, Alberta Fire Means Mom Won't See Son Married In Jamaica

    Evacuated Twice, Alberta Fire Means Mom Won't See Son Married In Jamaica
    The passport was one of the few belongings she had when she left her basement apartment in Fort McMurray earlier this month.

    Evacuated Twice, Alberta Fire Means Mom Won't See Son Married In Jamaica

    Ripley's Reopens In Niagara Falls, Ont., After Six-Month Makeover

    Ripley's Reopens In Niagara Falls, Ont., After Six-Month Makeover
    Ripley's Believe It or Not opened the doors to its so-called "odditorium" Friday after six months of renovations aimed at replacing traditional exhibits with something more hands-on.

    Ripley's Reopens In Niagara Falls, Ont., After Six-Month Makeover