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An Australian mother and her 5 y/o daughter are trapped in Egypt.

By SHAUNA ANDERSON

 

Zareen Finn wants to come home.

 

 

 

Five-year old Zareen should have started school in Melbourne this year.

She should be making new friends and playing tip.

She should be watching Frozen in her Melbourne home and pestering her older siblings to play with her.

But she’s not.

Because five-year-old Zareen has been trapped in Egypt for over a year unable to come home to where her two older siblings live, unable to start school.

Her mum, Amaal Finn, is now there with her, living in a small apartment afraid to leave the door — all because her estranged husband placed a travel ban on her and her daughter, preventing them from leaving Egypt, even though he is living in Melbourne himself.

In 2012 the family travelled to Egypt together with Amaal’s husband, Mazen Hassan Baioumy. It was then that he prevented the then three-and-a-half year old  Zareen from returning to Australia with her mother.

Her mum flew back to Egypt to try and get a court order to allow her daughter to come home – and has been there ever since. Her two older children a son aged 12 and  a 14-year-old daughter remain in Melbourne.

Despite an Australian court ordering Baioumy to lift the travel ban, he has not done so.

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Amaal says that she is afraid to leave her small apartment.

The Herald Sun reports the mother is entangled in expensive legal proceedings in Benha, Egypt, which has cost her and her family almost $100,000.

Foreign Affairs Minister Julie Bishop has been approached by Amaal on several occasions but has not responded to the family.

News Limited reports that the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade spokeswoman said, “The government had no standing to intervene in court matters involving Australians overseas.”

On a Facebook page set up by Amaal’s family, a poster writes of the threats Amaal faces, writing that there has “been multiple death threats against Amaal, violence against people helping Amaal, and two attempted kidnappings – one by Baioumy’s family and another by thugs hired by them.”

Child recovery specialist Colin Chapman told News Limited it was common for cases like this to take up to two years to resolve.

He said he can’t understand why the won’t intervene at least with a letter.

“A letter isn’t asking much. The Government can say, our courts have ordered this to be done … perhaps you can take a closer look at it,” he said.

Amaal has set up a Change.org petition to try and get Foreign Minister Julie Bishop involved in her case.

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