YOU (South Africa)

JOY OF A FAMILY REUNITED

He had to resort to a daring kidnap to get his Mijah back – now Michael is the happiest dad in the world

- By ALMARI WESSELS Pictures: MISHA JORDAAN

HE HAS a huge smile as he sits on the couch in his home in Port Elizabeth, an arm around each of his daughters. Michael Kliment will never take the simple joy of such an ordinary moment for granted again – not after the battle he’s had to get his younger daughter home.

At the end of June, desperate after being separated from Mijah for almost four years, Michael travelled to Slovakia and “kidnapped” her from outside her school.

Then they went on the run from Interpol for five weeks (YOU, 28 July).

They crossed the border into Hungary and spent weeks moving around Europe before a court finally decided Mijah belongs with her father in South Africa and not with his late ex-wife’s parents in Slovakia. Michael, a 43-year-old businessma­n, is ecstatic.

“I have both my daughters with me now – what more could a father want? The best part is waking up every morning with her here. There are 10 million teddy bears in her bedroom – there’s no space for her to sleep!”

Mijah has been home for only four days but it’s clear the energetic youngster has her dad and older sister, Mikaila (18), wrapped around her finger.

“When I walked in here this morning Mijah was curled up in Dad’s bed watching TV,” says Mikaila, Michael’s daughter from a previous relationsh­ip.

She travelled with her dad to Slovakia in June to “kidnap” her little sister. In our earlier article Mijah was referred to as Anja to protect her identity because the legal side of things hadn’t been sorted out yet.

Mijah is happy to be back in South

LHappily together again: Michael Kliment with Mijah (middle) and Mikaila. Mijah’s mom, Janka (BELOW LEFT) died in April. Africa and to have reclaimed the pretty toy-filled bedroom she has in her dad’s seafront home.

She likes going shopping, she adds, and her dad has promised her they’ll go to look at a Yorkie puppy later today. She wants one for her ninth birthday, she says, and she wants to name him Pupi. IFE is slowly returning to normal for Michael and his daughters. Mijah had been in Slovakia since leaving South Africa in November 2012 with her mother, Janka Klimentova. It was meant to be just a visit to her homeland, but Janka decided she wanted to stay – and Michael found himself in and out of court in a bid to get his daughter, who was born in Port Elizabeth, back home.

Janka and Michael eventually divorced in May last year and he was granted

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