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Kidnap boy Andrew Thompson 'may not return' to Australia |
KEN Thompson's joy at the news his missing son has been found in Amsterdam has been tempered by his lingering fear that international laws on child abduction could make it difficult to get six-year-old Andrew back to Australia.
Mr Thompson, a former NSW deputy fire commissioner, said in Amsterdam yesterday "my experience so far with these laws has taught me that you cannot take anything for granted".
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Morcombe group bankrolled Thompson hunt |
The foundation formed in honour of missing Queensland boy Daniel Morcombe helped bankroll Ken Thompson's international hunt for his son. The Australian father was finally reunited with his son Andrew, six, in Amsterdam on Monday.
Mr Thompson's son was found after Amsterdam police received a tip-off earlier this month, paving the way for their reunion.
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Australian Ken Thompson cycles Europe in desperate search for his son |
AUSTRALIAN Ken Thompson has spent every day for three months cycling through Europe, looking for his son.
But there is no telling where, when, how or even if his remarkable journey will end.
He says, quite frankly, he doesn't care if it takes the rest of his life, just as long as he finds his little boy.
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Rhoda Barsalli Failed Lebanon Recovery |
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This is the story of Rhoda Barsalli ( nee Abou-Saleh) and her plight in trying to recover her 2 children her son Ibrahim Abou-Saleh and daughter Tala Abo-Saleh, who were caliously abducted from Sydney Australia by their father Tazal Abou-Saleh and whisked away to Lebanon.
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NSW Fire Brigade Deputy Commissioner pleads for return of son |
NSW Fire Brigade Deputy Commissioner Ken Thompson pleads for return of son Andrew, 4, who has been abducted by estranged wife Melinda.
New South Wales Fire Brigade Deputy Commissioner Ken Thompson has issued an international plea for information leading to his son's safe return.
Australian authorities say Andrew, 4, was abducted by his mother, Mr Thompson's estranged wife Melinda, on April 24 this year.
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JUST days before his two young sons were due to board a flight home from Sweden, George Pesor sensed in their faltering voices that something wasn't right. "They weren't engaged in the normal way that they are when they talk to me," Pesor says of their phonecall. "They weren't upbeat."
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