A Chinese couple whose son was abducted in a hotel in 1988 have found him and reunited with him after 32 years.
According to a report from BBC, Mao Yin was snatched when he was 2 years old when his father stopped to get him some water on the way home from nursery.
His distraught parents searched the country for him and his mother distributed more than 100,000 flyers.
The family were reunited at a police news conference on Monday and the son – now aged 34 – said he planned to spend time with his parents.
“I would like to thank the tens of thousands of people who helped us,” said Li Jingzhi, the boy’s mother.
He was born on 23 February, 1986. In an interview with the South China Morning Post in January – before he was found – his mother called him a “very clever, cute, and healthy” baby.
On 17 October 1988, his father, Mao Zhenjing, was bringing him home from nursery in the city of Xian in Shaanxi province.
The boy asked for a drink of water, so they stopped in the entrance of a hotel. As the father got some bottles of water, he looked away briefly, and the boy was abducted.
The family searched in and around Xian, putting up posters. At one point, they thought they had found him, but it was a false dawn.
Mrs Li quit her job to search for her son – handing out some 100,000 flyers in more than 10 provinces and municipalities – without success.
Over the years, she appeared on numerous Chinese television shows to appeal for help, including The X Factor. She followed 300 leads, the SCMP said, but no match was found,
In 2007, Mrs Li started volunteering with a group called “Baby Come Back Home”, to help other parents look for their missing children.
According to state media, she helped reunite 29 children with their families, while her own son was still missing. She intends to keep working with the group.
In April, state media said, police received a tip about a man from Sichuan Province in south-west China – about 1,000 kilometres from Xian – who had adopted a baby years earlier.
Police found the adoptee, now a 34-year-old man, and a DNA test was carried out to see if he was related to Mao Zhenjing and Li Jingzhi. It came back positive.
Mao Yin – who had been renamed Gu Ningning – now runs a home decoration business. He said he was “not sure” about the future, but would spend time with his parents.
Police said he had been sold as a boy to a childless couple for 6,000 yuan (£690, $840 in today’s money).
Mrs Li was told the good news on 10 May – Mother’s Day in China. “This is the best gift I have ever got,” she said.
The investigation into the 1988 disappearance is still ongoing. The authorities have not released information about the couple who raised Mao Yin.