The Star Malaysia

Mystery of missing boy found in closet grips Germany

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FRANKFURT AM MAIN: The case of a missing 15-year-old boy found in a closet at the flat of a suspected paedophile has gripped Germany, but his mother says she just wants to celebrate Christmas with her son.

Marvin had been missing for over two years when he was found hiding in a cupboard last Friday as police searched the home of a 44-year-old man suspected of distributi­ng child pornograph­y.

The stunning discovery in the western town of Recklingha­usen has drawn comparison­s to two shocking cases in Austria – of Natascha Kampusch, who was held by her kidnapper for eight years before she managed to escape in 2006; and of Elisabeth Fritzl, who was kept in a cellar and repeatedly raped by her father Josef in an ordeal that lasted 24 years.

Marvin, who disappeare­d after saying goodbye to his carers at a youth shelter early on June 11, 2017, is currently in psychiatri­c care.

“I want to visit him for Christmas, to celebrate a little with him,” his mother Manuela B., 53, told German tabloid Bild.

A police spokesman yesterday said the decision on when Marvin could go home “is up to the doctors”.

Many questions remain answered in the case that German media have dubbed an “Advent miracle” – including how the boy ended up at the flat and if he could have left at any time.

Police said in a statement that the officers who discovered him “did not see indication­s at that point that he was being held against his will”.

But Marvin’s mother, who was briefly reunited with her son on Friday, doubted he was there entirely out of free will.

“The man whose place they found him at must have manipulate­d him,” she told Bild. “I go crazy thinking about what’s been done to him.” She said Marvin was found wearing the same clothes as on the day he vanished and that he looked like “a broken old man”.

“He now needs to process what’s happened over the past two and a half years. This is all so painful,” she added.

His stepfather Michael B. said he believed the boy hadn’t stayed at the flat voluntaril­y, adding that Marvin “didn’t talk much” when he saw his mother.

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