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Frantic search for French toddler who went missing in hamlet

Emile, aged two and a half, went on a walk while his grandparents prepared their car for a family trip from their house in a hamlet in the lower Alps region on Sunday, and despite a search involving  a helicopter, drones equipped with thermic cameras and sniffer dogs, the infant remained missing on Monday. 

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French police are engaged in an extensive air and land search for a missing two-year-old boy who disappeared from a village in the south of the country at the weekend, reports The Guardian.

The toddler, Émile, was playing in the garden of his grandparents’ house in a hamlet just outside Le Vernet in the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence between Grenoble and Nice when he vanished on Saturday afternoon.

“The family was getting ready to leave the house to go on an outing. He took advantage of this fleeting moment [of inattention] to leave,” François Balique, the mayor of Le Vernet, told French television. “His grandparents realised he was no longer there when they went to put him in the car.”

Balique said the boy was a good walker for his age and there was no suggestion he had been abducted. “It’s a small village with 20 or so houses … we see everything,” he said. “He could have gone some distance and perhaps got lost or was hiding.”

Police, gendarmes and firefighters were joined by family members and villagers after the grandparents alerted them to Émile’s disappearance at about 5.15pm local time. Search and rescue teams using a helicopter, drones equipped with thermic cameras and sniffer dogs have combed the area since, but no trace of the child has been found despite covering more than 1,200 acres.

Read more of this report from The Guardian.