Malaysian-Indian parents expand missing daughter’s search to Malaysian villages
By ANITuesday, July 6, 2010
KUALA LUMPUR - The parents of missing Malaysian-Indian toddler, G. Chandramohan and Wong Lai Lan have refused to give up on their search for daughter Nisha, and are now distributing her posters in small villages in Mentakab, in Malaysia after having covered every nook and corner in the city area.
“We are now focusing on traditional villages and Orang Asli settlements as most likely the people there have not read the newspapers and therefore don’t know about our efforts to locate Nisha,” the New Straits Times quoted Chandramohan, as saying.
The paper also stated that he had to seek help from other family members as his wife had started working from July 1. She works at a steel mill in Mentakab as a clerk.
“I will never give up as I believe Nisha is still alive. Maybe the people who found her have no idea who she is,” Wong said.
The family continued with their search with help from RHB Bank’s programme of reuniting missing children with their families.
Nisha was reported missing after she was taken out by her mentally ill aunt on June 4 from the victim’s grandmother’s house in Mentakab in Pahang.
The family took up the task on themselves after police failed to trace her whereabouts. (ANI)