Sharlinie Mohd Nashar |
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Born | (2004-01-30) January 30, 2004 (age 20)
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Disappeared | January 9, 2008; 17 years ago (2008-01-09) Petaling Jaya, Selangor, Malaysia |
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Status | Missing for 17 years and 8 days |
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Other names | Nini |
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Parents |
- Suraya Ahmad (mother)
- Mohd Nashar Mat Hussain (father)
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Relatives | Sharliena Mohd Nashar (sister) |
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The disappearance of Sharlinie Mohd Nashar occurred on January 9, 2008, in Petaling Jaya, Selangor, Malaysia.[1] The four-year-old daughter of Mohd Nashar Mat Hussain and Suraya Ahmad, she went disappeared after playing at the playground with her eight-year-old sister.[2] Like Tin Song Sheng who went missing since 1996, Sharlinie's body have never been found and she has never been proven to be dead. No kidnapping or murder charges have ever been filed. Her mysterious disappearance occurred not long after the Nurin Jazlin Jazimin case in 2007.[3][4]
Early life
Sharlinie, fondly known by her nickname Nini,[5] was born on 30 January 2004 in Petaling Jaya, Selangor to her parents Suraya Ahmad and Mohd Nashar Mat Hussain.[6] She has four siblings and was the youngest. Sharliena is one of her sisters. Sharlinie has asthma and depends on vintolin intake.[7]
Disappearance
On 9 January 2008, Sharlinie left her house to go to the playground which is located just 200 metres from the two-storey terrace house in PJS 2, Taman Datuk Harun, Petaling Jaya. Accompanied by her eight-year-old sister, Sharliena, the two of them played together for 30 minutes before the incident at 11.30am.[8][4]
But, only Sharliena returns home that day after she failed to discover her younger sister.[9] Her younger brother tell their mother, Suraya Ahmad, regarding Sharlinie's disappearance and dan the family went to the playground to find her. Her family then lodge a police report after a failed two-hours of her searching.[8] A doll belongs to Sharlinie was found by locals at the location where she was reported missing.[10]
Search efforts and investigation
The police have opened an investigation into Sharlinie's disappearance and have begun a massive search effort to track her down.[11] The massive searching for her conducted by the police and the public.[12] Thousands of homes in the area were searched by authorities, but Sharlinie was never found. There are allegations that the child was tied up with candy by an unknown woman before being forced into a black car.[8]
In addition, there were also rumors that a man, nicknamed "cat man", had approached the girl to ask for an excuse to look for her missing cat before kidnapping her. Just two days before Sharlinie's disappearance, a six-year-old girl who was playing not far from her home about two kilometres from the missing victim's home, was kidnapped by the same "cat man". However, about three hours later, she was found unharmed about 25 km away in Wangsa Maju.[8]
The photo of the "cat man" was then widely distributed to the public. The details about the "cat man" have also been revealed by witnesses and victims in other cases and attempted kidnappings. The search for Sharlinie stretched from weeks to months with hundreds of thousands of posters of the child distributed across the country. Dozens of calls, many of them hoaxes, were received by authorities and the victim's family, but failed to find any clues to Sharlinie's whereabouts.[8]
The then-Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Musa Hassan have ordered Bukit Aman and Selangor to find Sharlinie. He said to Utusan Malaysia: "We are hunting for two suspects through sketches of their faces and will distribute them widely to print and electronic media. The police also hope that the public will come forward to help provide information as there are many stalls in the area where the incident occurred".[4][13]
Sharlinie's disappearance also received a response from the then-Prime Minister, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi. He called on the kidnappers to return Sharlinie to her family.[14][15]
See also
References
Further reading
External links