A criminal investigation was launched into the alleged abduction of British teenager Alex Batty, who was found last week in France six years after his mother and grandfather took him on a vacation and never returned home, Greater Manchester police said on Friday.
Police launch probe into alleged abduction of British teen Alex Batty who went missing 6 years ago
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Missing British schoolboy Alex Batty who was believed to have been abducted by his mother six years ago and has been found in France. Photo / AP
Batty had left the place they had been staying two days earlier — not four days as he initially reported — and provided other details he thought would throw investigators off their trail, he said.
“I’ve been lying to try and protect my mum and grandad but I realise that they’re probably gonna get caught anyway,” he told The Sun. “I pretended I had been on such a long journey for that reason.”
Batty said the entire time he had been away, he made friends with only one child his own age — a Spanish girl. He did not go to school, had to work, had no social life and began to question his future.
He had thought about leaving for at least two years, and even discussed it with his mom and grandfather.
“I wouldn’t know what was going to happen in my future if I were to stay with my mum, but from the past few years I could get a picture of what life would have been like,” Batty said. “Moving around. No friends, no social life. Working, working, work and not studying. That’s the life I imagined I would be leading if I were to stay with my mum.”
He said his mother was against him leaving.
“She was very anti-government, anti-vax,” Batty said. “She was worried that if I were to go back to a country and get my ID I would be put into care. Her catchphrase was becoming a ‘slave to the system’.”
He said he left the farmhouse where they had been staying near Chalabre in the Aude region of southern France about midnight on December 11, after his mother was in bed.
“She’s a great person and I love her, but she’s just not a great mum,” he said.
He took a backpack with four T-shirts, three pairs of trousers, a skateboard, torch, €100 ($175) and a Swiss Army Knife.
Batty said he was shaking when he walked into his grandmother’s house and gave her a “massive hug”.
He said he wanted to go to college to study computer science, or cybersecurity or blockchain development. He said he was happy to be home.
“The house is different now but still feels the same,” he said. “The biggest difference is when I left I was a boy but now I’m 6ft (1.8m) so I’m too big for the bed. It feels great to be back.”