Xiao Yun, a Chinese Woman who was Missing for a Decade, Has Been Found in an Internet Cafe
Xiao Yun was missing for a decade after she ran away from home. She spent her days sleeping and playing the multiplayer shooter game CrossFire in Internet cafes.
She was well-known in China for live-streaming and writing about the authorities’ initial handling of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Her family grew concerned when she stopped sending photos and messages to them. Then, her phone went completely offline on July 25.
Xiao Yun’s parents thought she was dead
Xiao Yun disappeared in 2005, and her family thought she had died. But 10 years later, she has been found living in an internet cafe. She was spotted by police officers who were doing routine checks at the cafe. During questioning, she admitted that she had been living in Internet cafes since she left home. She said she survived by working as a cashier in the cafes and by getting food handouts from fellow customers. She also spent her days playing online video games.
Xiao’s mother told the Qianjiang Evening News that she had not changed her phone number in the past decade in hopes that Xiao would contact her someday. She had also kept a copy of her daughter’s ID card in the hope that she could find her one day.
When she was reunited with her parents, Xiao said that she wanted to see the world before she died. Her mother was overjoyed to hear that her daughter was alive. She said that she hoped Xiao would come visit her someday soon.
Xiao is now back in the Forbidden City and she’s feeling different than usual. She has been thinking about the people that she knows who have been killed by the Knights Templar, and she has started to regret taking revenge. She has also realized that the Macau fire was a disaster that she caused, and she thinks that she should have stayed away from the Knights Templar.
While Xiao is still upset over the death of her friends, she has decided to forgive herself and move on. She is now determined to fight for freedom, and she wants to show her mother that she can be a good person as well as an assassin.
When she is finished with her mission, Xiao will return to the city and spend the rest of her life in peace. She will also visit her parents, and she will give them a copy of her ID card so that they can always find her. Xiao will never forget the things that her father has taught her, and she will continue to use her skills as an assassin to help the people of China.
She was found living in an Internet cafe
The 24-year-old woman left her home in Zhejiang province, eastern China, while still in her teens after a quarrel with her parents. She was never seen again, and was presumed dead by her family. But police reportedly found her living in an Internet cafe. The woman, identified only by her surname of Xiao Yun, was reportedly found on Nov 20 after police officers conducted a routine check at the cafe. The officer noticed the woman was playing online games and was suspicious of her behavior, so he asked her to show her ID card. When she handed it to him, he realized the woman was using a fake name and address.
Upon questioning, the woman revealed that she had been living in Internet cafes for the past decade. She spent her days playing online games and slept in various cafes and bath houses. She allegedly earned additional income by working as a cashier at some of the cafes. She also received handouts from those who pitied her.
According to police, Xiao Yun had contacted her online acquaintance, John Root Fitzpatrick, 52, from Morongo Basin Area in California. The two planned to meet in July to tour the US desert region together.
She reportedly sent several videos of her trip to California before she disappeared. The final video was posted on July 21, and was the only one that showed her traveling north on Adobe road in 29 Palms. The video was silent, and the background was dark. This was unlike all the other videos she sent, which were joyful and featured her talking.
A police search team searched for the woman on Saturday. The team looked at the deserted area near a building in tambon Bang Phra of Muang district and another location close to Tha It village. The officers spotted burned remnants of a bag and a document in the area.
Police have not determined the cause of the fires, but they suspect foul play. They have also been searching closed-circuit television footage.
She was fined for using a fake ID
The family of a Chinese woman who disappeared in Thailand in early July has been shattered by the discovery of a skeleton believed to be hers. According to police, the remains were found in a suspicious grassy area near a village in Chachoengsao province. Metropolitan police investigators, led by Pol Maj Gen Noppasil Poolsawat, searched the location based on closed-circuit television footage. They spotted two black plastic bags filled with soil and tile fragments near a deserted site. Police are still waiting for DNA tests to confirm the identity of the body.
Xiao Yun ran away from home in Zhejiang, China at the age of 14 after a dispute with her parents. She was presumed dead, but was discovered by police on Nov 20 after a routine check at an Internet cafe where she was living. During questioning, she confessed that she had spent the past decade sleeping in Internet cafes and spending her days playing online games.
She had been using a fake ID to enter the country to play video games and earn money. Her mother and sister are devastated by her disappearance. Her father said he had been searching for her for a year. She had hoped to return to her hometown and work as an accountant in her late teens.
Ms Yan’s last contact with her family was on July 3, the day she disappeared. She sent a video of herself traveling north on Adobe Road in 29 Palms around 10pm. It was silent, unlike her previous videos which were full of joy and laughter. The family is anxiously awaiting the results of DNA tests.
If the DNA matches that of her father, the police will be able to issue an arrest warrant for Ma Qingyan. However, they will need her to return to Thailand to verify the identity of the remains.
The disappearance of 47-year-old Chinese woman Jin Fang is another example of how the one-child policy in China has resulted in a shortage of women for marriage. She traveled to California this summer to meet her online acquaintance, 52-year-old John Root Fitzpatrick, on a tour of the Morongo Basin area.
She hugged her mother
It’s not every day that a long-lost mother and daughter are reunited after a decade apart, but that’s exactly what happened in China. Xiao Yun, 24, ran away from home in 2005 after arguing with her parents. She was found alive and well in an Internet cafe this weekend by police officers conducting a random check. Using a fake ID, she confessed to living and playing games in the cafes for a decade. She was a fan of the multiplayer first-person shooter game CrossFire and claimed to earn a living by working as a cashier at some of the cafes.