The woman, who disappeared in 1999 when she was 15,
penned a note and begged a neighbour to give it to her family, but they hung on
to it for five years
A teenager who was kidnapped and forced to marry a man
twice her age has been rescued 17 years later when an SOS letter finally
reached her family.
The woman, who has only been identified as "A
Hua", disappeared suddenly in 1999 when she was just 15.
At the time there was no evidence she had been
abducted and her family believed she may have run away.
Now aged 32, the woman, from the city of Jinjiang, in
East China's Fujian Province, has finally been reunited with relatives after a
letter she wrote five years ago was finally delivered.
It comes weeks after a 12-year-old girl from East
China was taken to hospital pregnant accompanied by a 40-year-old man claiming
to be her husband.
A Hua said she had befriended a boy who lived next
door with his relatives - a group of construction workers from south-western
China's Guizhou Province who had arrived for a job.
On the day of her kidnapping, A Hua was invited by the
group to "travel" with them to Guizhou - several hundred miles away -
with them as their work had finished, and the innocent girl said yes, believing
that the seemingly trustworthy men would do her no harm.
But she was taken to the village of Huangkan in
Guizhou's Renhuai City where she was forced to marry the man in his 30s,
surnamed Huang, whose wife had recently died.
Held against her will, A Hua had two sons with Huang
and was unable to leave or even contact her family.
She said she tried to run away once but was quickly
brought home and beaten.
Five years ago A Hua secretly wrote a letter addressed
to her parents and begged one of her village neighbours to deliver it.
But the neighbour reportedly believed she was meddling
in another family's affairs and never posted it, despite witnessing firsthand
the poor conditions in which A Hua lived and the treatment she received from
her husband and in-laws.
The woman kept the note for five years until she
recently felt she would never be able to forgive herself if she did not speak
up.
She attached the SOS letter to a note of her own,
delivering it to the address told to her five years ago and apologising for
taking so long to send it out.
A Hua's family contacted police right after receiving
the letter and the woman was finally freed and reunited with her relatives.
Authorities are now looking into the human trafficking
case, but have yet to announce any formal arrests.
A
Hua's letter, dated 27 June, 2011, read: "Respected dad and mum, hello.
"This
is the first time I am writing to you. I am very lonely and can only miss you
in secret.
"I'm
being forced to work every day and I'm dying of exhaustion. Please come take me
home!"
A
Hua went on to list her exact address in Huangkai village, ending the note by
saying: "I won't say anymore, dad and mum - I'm afraid I'll get
caught."
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