https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6467689/Mother-hides-missing-son-five-days-test-husband-loves-them.html
Mother who reported her son missing has actually hidden him for five days in
a tuk tuk to test if her husband really loves them
6 December 2018  Tracy You For Mailonline

[images  
https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2018/12/06/15/7081176-6467689-image-a-45_1544110596261.jpg
The 11-year-old boy, Huang, was on his way home from school ...

https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2018/12/06/15/7081158-6467689-image-m-44_1544110585623.jpg
 ... when his mother met him and told him to hide in a tuk tuk, according to
police who released the boy's picture

https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2018/12/06/15/7081178-6467689-image-a-39_1544110231098.jpg
Huang's father (pictured) said he would offer £56,800 to anyone who could
find his son
]

  - Woman in China told her son to hide in [Electric tuk tuk ] vehicle
before calling the police
  - Officers launched a five-day city-wide search while the mother played
along
  - Her plot was uncovered by police after they found the child Tuesday
night 
  - The couple had conflict and she wanted to find out her husband's
priority 

A Chinese mother who reported her son missing turned out to have hidden the
child for five days in a plot to test if her husband really cares about
them.

The 33-year-old woman told her 11-year-old boy to hide in an electric tuk
tuk before calling the police last Friday, begging them to help look for her
'missing son'.

She then moved the tuk tuk around the town to avoid her child being found.

Police in Yueqing, eastern China, launched a five-day city-wide search for
the child. They found him safe and sound on Tuesday night at the village of
Yunling before uncovering his mother's secret plan.   

The woman is currently under police control while further investigation is
being carried out. 

Yueqing police said the mother, identified as Chen, met her son, identified
as Huang, on his way home from school at around 6pm last Friday. She told
him to stay in her tuk tuk with the food she had prepared and not to come
out. 

Chen then contacted the police at about 7pm, claiming that her son had gone
missing on his way home from school. 

The woman appeared to be extremely anxious after reporting the case together
with her husband.  

Police immediately organised officers to search for the boy. 

[image]  The family live in a rented flat (pictured) in Yueqing, a city in
eastern China's Zhejiang province

[image]  Police launched a five-day city-wide search to look for the boy who
was believed to be missing

An earlier police statement said officers spent the next few days watching
CCTV footage filmed along the roads between the boy's home and school.
Policemen also visited the internet cafes, hotels, rented homes and
waterways along the route in hope of finding the boy. 

A social media campaign was launched, led by the police, to enlist help from
the public. Local authorities had flyers for the 'missing boy' made and
posted them around the city. 

Chen's husband, who believed that his son had really gone missing, was so
worried he reportedly couldn't sleep for four nights.

He had posters made with the child's information. In a social media video,
he held the post and said he would offer 500,000 yuan (£56,800) in cash to
anyone who could bring his son back to him. 

The boy was found by the police at around 10:40pm on Tuesday. He was said to
be safe and generally healthy.

In a statement from yesterday, the police said the whole event was a plot
contrived by the boy's mother as a way to test her husband's love. 

It is said that the boy's father had been doing business away from home and
had conflict with his wife. 

As a result, the boy's mother deliberately planned the incident to find out
if her husband loves her and the child.

The police condemned the mother, saying that her behaviour 'had seriously
impacted social credibility and social conscience, wasted considerable
social resources and disrupting social order'.

She is currently under police control and is expected to be penalised. 

Further police investigation is under way.
[© dailymail.co.uk]
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