An extensive air and land search for a missing toddler in the mountainous village of Le Vernet, France, is nearing the 48-hour mark, a window that French authorities said would be “crucial to be able to optimize our chances” of finding him.
The two-and-a-half-year-old boy, identified as Émile, was playing in the garden of his grandparents’ house on Saturday around 6 p.m. local time when he vanished.
So far, nearly 300 volunteers, rescue workers, firefighters and police have participated in the search for Émile, aided by helicopters, sniffer dogs and drones equipped with thermal cameras. Balique noted on Sunday that around 400 to 500 hectares of land had been covered by search teams with no trace of the child.
The rugged terrain of the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence prefecture, where the small hamlet of Le Vernet is located, is popular with hikers for its rivers, ravines and steep paths, but makes for treacherous landscape for a toddler. The town is only home to about 130 inhabitants and has been described as a place where “everyone knows everyone.”
Two witnesses told authorities they saw Émile walking on a downhill road not far from the family home shortly after he was reported missing, according to Rémy Avon, prosecutor of Digne-les-Bains.
“This is where we then lose track of him,” said Avon in a Sunday press conference.
There is so far no indication that Émile was kidnapped, though Avon said authorities are keeping all their options open and at-home searches are being conducted.
“For the moment, no hypothesis has been eluded or favoured. We have no clue in the direction of the kidnapping,” he said, according to French daily La Provence.
Émile is described by national police as having blond hair, brown eyes and standing 90
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