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Somali immigrant who survived an arduous flight to Hawaii stowed away in a
jet's wheel well says he was trying to reach his mum, a refugee in Ethiopia who
says her teenage son broke down in tears this week during their first call
since his ordeal.
Mum you are not dead for sure? I thought you died in a boat
trip. This is incredible news.' Then he became silent for a moment. Then he
cried," she said.
Yahya Abdi, 15, said Tuesday that he ran away from his Santa
Clara home, hopped a fence at Mineta San Jose International Airport in April
and climbed aboard the Hawaiian Airlines plane because it was the first flight
he could find heading west, and he wanted to go see his mother. Yahya, who
described crouching in the wheel well and covering his ears at take-off, made
his first public comments during a Google Chat on Tuesday to KPIX-5.
"It was above the clouds, I could see through the little
holes," Yahya said, who gave short, stilted answers.
When asked if he can believe he survived the trip, Yahya paused
several seconds: "Uh, no." But he also said he wasn't scared.
Yahya survived the flight at 35,000 feet despite low oxygen and
freezing temperatures. Video footage from the Maui airport shows him dropping
to the tarmac about an hour after the jet landed.
The teen said he made the decision to get on board the plane
because he didn't want to live with his stepmother and wanted to find his mother,
who he hasn't seen since he was seven years old.
Yahya is staying at a temporary foster home. He will be a junior
in high school this fall and plans to live with his aunt in the Minneapolis
area.
Yahya has been spending his days doing normal teenage things.
"I've been going to the movie theatre and playing video games," he
told KPIX-5.
Earlier this year, police said they were investigating possible
criminal charges against the boy for climbing the airport fence, and that the
teen was being cared for by child protective services.
The Santa Clara County Office of the Public Defender confirms it
has been appointed to "advise and assist" the boy, but could not say
in what capacity due to juvenile privacy rules.
A family spokeswoman forwarded questions on Wednesday from AP to
father Abdilahi Yusuf, a Santa Clara taxi driver, about why his son is not
living with him. As with past requests, Yusuf has not responded. The
spokeswoman, Zahra Billoo with the Council on American-Islamic Relations, says
the family wants to maintain their privacy.
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