In
1991, 4-year-old Sun Bin was taken by child traffickers from his
hometown in Sichuan province and sold to a family thousands of miles
away, in Jiangsu province on the country's eastern coast, Chinese state media reported.
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Sun Bin when he was four with his father. |
On
Tuesday, Sun was finally reacquainted with his 60-year-old father, Sun
Youhong, and a younger sister he had never met. The moment was captured
in a moving series of photographs.
"I was happy. I was grateful," the father said. "But I was also bitter."
Child
trafficking is still a major business in China, as traffickers seek to
profit off a growing demand for healthy babies from potential adoptive
parents in China and elsewhere.
Boys, prized because they carry on the family line, are in great demand and fetch higher prices.
Earlier
this week, Chinese police said they had rescued 37 newborn babies after
busting a trafficking ring that sold the babies for up $13,000 each.
"You're a man. Don't cry," said the elder Sun, according to a report released by the state news agency Xinhua.
The Search
Sun
Bin was just a toddler when he disappeared at a vegetable market in
1991. Sun Youhong said that he and his wife had dropped everything to
search for him.
"To
find our son had been my wife's biggest wish in life," Sun Youhong told
Xinhua earlier this week. "And days before she passed away she was
constantly murmuring our son's name."
Sun Bin told Chinese journalists he had always thought he was adopted but he didn't know where his original home was.
He said he had never asked his adoptive parents how he ended up with them.
As
he grew older, he said his wish to find his own family had become
stronger and stronger. He left a DNA sample with a local police station
in Jiangsu in October 2014 and recently received a phone call saying
that a match had been found.
The family also received assistance from a Chinese web site called "Baby Come Home," which helps reunite separated relatives.
The
elder Sun said he was disappointed to learn that his missing child had
been put to work as an electrician when he was still a teenager.
"I would have kept my son in school at the age of 15," he said.
In
a phone interview, the father accused his son's adoptive
parents of breaking the law, for accepting a kidnapped child.
"But as long as my son comes back to live with me, I won't press charges against them," he added.
Sun
Bin has yet to make a decision of whether he will leave the adoptive
coastal town where he was raised. For now he is sleeping for the first
time in 24 years in the home of his biological father.
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