Khaleej Times

11 starving kids living in US den rescued; two arrested

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LOS ANGELES — Police say 11 children ages one to 15 were rescued in the US state of New Mexico after officers raided a dilapidate­d compound occupied by armed men.

Two men were arrested after police found them and the children in what one officer called “the saddest living conditions and poverty I have seen,” as part of the operation connected to a months-long search for an abducted three-year-old, according to New Mexico’s Taos County sheriff ’s office.

The investigat­ion kicked off late last year on the opposite side of the country in Jonesboro, Georgia, where 39-year-old Siraj Wahhaj of the state’s Clayton County was accused of kidnapping his toddler — who was ultimately not found.

The boy’s mother told police her child, who she said suffered from seizures along with developmen­tal and cognitive delays, went to the park with his father Wahhaj last December and never returned.

On August 2, Sheriff Jerry Hogrefe of Taos County in New Mexico issued a search warrant describing “a makeshift compound surrounded by tyres and an earthen berm” in a subdivisio­n in the rural community of Amalia, where Wahhaj along with adult Lucas Morten were thought to be in hiding.

The FBI had provided informatio­n and surveillan­ce on the spot but “didn’t feel there was enough probable cause to get on the property,” Hogrefe said.

“That all changed for me when a message was forwarded to us from a Georgia Detective that we reasonably believed came from someone at the compound — the message sent to a third party simply said in part ‘we are starving and need food and water,’” the sheriff said in a statement.

The sheriff described planning “a tactical approach for our own safety because we had learned the occupants were most likely heavily armed.”

On the morning of August 3, a dozen officers kicked off the “all day” operation, discoverin­g hidden beneath New Mexico’s scrubland the two men with an AR-15 rifle, five loaded 30-round magazines and four loaded pistols, including one in Wahhaj’s pocket.

The men had refused to follow verbal direction, police said, who added the raid went without major incident or injuries even as Wahhaj needed to be “taken down.”

Police found many more ammo rounds in the ramshackle hideout. “The only food we saw were a few potatoes and a box of rice in the filthy trailer,” Hogrefe said. “But what was most surprising, and heartbreak­ing was when the team located a total of five adults and 11 children that looked like third world country refugees.”

“Not only with no food or fresh water, but with no shoes, personal hygiene and basically dirty rags for clothing.” Morten was charged with harbouring a fugitive and Wahhaj was booked without bond on his Georgia warrant for child abduction.—

 ?? AFP ?? This undated photo released by the Taos County Sheriff’s Office shows a view of the compound in Amalia, new Mexico. —
AFP This undated photo released by the Taos County Sheriff’s Office shows a view of the compound in Amalia, new Mexico. —
 ?? AFP ?? Siraj Ibn Wahhaj. —
AFP Siraj Ibn Wahhaj. —
 ?? AFP ?? lucas Morten. —
AFP lucas Morten. —

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