Philippines ferry recovery suspended over death of missing student

Philippines ferry recovery suspended over death of missing student

Updated

A schoolgirl who disappeared while swimming at sea has been found safe after five days in captivity in an Indonesian island.

An Indonesian media report said the body of the nine-year-old who was missing in the waters of the Gulf of Malacca on Saturday was pulled from a well near where she was found.

A search is now under way for the teenager’s older sister Asepah, who is also missing.

She remains missing from about 5:00am local time yesterday (13:00 GMT).

Indonesian police said the 17-year-old daughter had not been seen since Tuesday, and that they had found no traces of blood or other signs of an attack on her body.

„It was decided we were going to keep her for now because we wanted her to return safely home, but she’s still missing,예스카지노“ police chief Inspector General Jassim Kavale said at the scene where the body was recovered.

„We want to find her sister. The more I talk to relatives, family members, we’ll make our plans accordingly.“

The missing girl has been described as a quiet, peaceful and quiet girl and had been studying in an educational institution in the city of Medan, pol카지노 사이트ice said.

Asepah’s sister posted a photo on her Facebook page showing a smiling Asepah holding her head up for cameras after being found safe in a well.

The Indonesian government has ordered Indonesia’s army to join the search and rescue operation for the teen, in which soldiers, sailors and marines were helping.

The army will also join the hunt, according to the Defence Ministry, which was quoted as saying the mission 바카라was expected to last at least 30 days.

Indonesia has been without a functioning search and rescue agency since the disappearance of an eight-year-old Indonesian boy in July 2004.

Indonesia said the boy had run away from his school and drowned.

The case has been a source of tension in the country, which has a harsh reputation as a dumping ground for sex offenders.

The country also has a reputation as a haven for child sex tourism and in 2009 the chief of the military’s sexual assault branch was named as being close to the sex offenders.

Last year, the country’s military chief called for an overhaul of the legal framework for the treatment of child soldiers that included the establishment of special courts for sexual abuse case