Missing Japanese boy (7) left in forest as punishment

Search teams comb woods after parents leave child in wilderness to discipline him

People search for a seven-year-old boy who went missing two days earlier, in Nanae town on the northernmost Japanese main island of Hokkaido, Japan on Monday. Photograph: Kyodo/Reuters
People search for a seven-year-old boy who went missing two days earlier, in Nanae town on the northernmost Japanese main island of Hokkaido, Japan on Monday. Photograph: Kyodo/Reuters

Searchers in northern Japan spent a third day on Monday looking for a seven-year-old Japanese boy who went missing after his parents left him in a forest to discipline him.

At least 130 firefighters and police officers were scouring the woods near Nanae town in Hokkaido, looking for Yamato Tanooka, media reported.

Tanooka’s parents initially told police they were picking wild plants when he went missing on Saturday.

Search teams scour the woods in search for a missing seven-year-old who went missing after his parents left him in the wilderness as punishment. Photograph: Kyodo/Reuters
Search teams scour the woods in search for a missing seven-year-old who went missing after his parents left him in the wilderness as punishment. Photograph: Kyodo/Reuters

However, they later admitted to police they had intentionally left the boy in the forest to discipline him after he threw rocks at people and cars earlier in the day, Japanese television stations reported.

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Tanooka’s parents said they drove about 500m away and when they returned shortly after they couldn’t find their son, who was last seen in a t-shirt and jeans.

Media reported that overnight temperatures in the forest have dropped to 7 degrees Celsius.

Reuters