A micro blog has become the last three weeks in an effective weapon against the abduction of children in China. What began as a voluntary initiative of a professor has become a movement of tens of thousands of Internet users willing to collaborate so that parents can get their children back. To date, seven children had already been recovered.
Chinese police have launched a new campaign against child abduction. It is the power of social networks on the Internet. It all started early last January when the Professor of Rural Development of the official Academy of Social Sciences, Yu Jianrong, known for its commitment to the disadvantaged, received a letter from a desperate mother who asked for help finding Yang Weixin your child over the Internet.
Chinese police have launched a new campaign against child abduction. It is the power of social networks on the Internet. It all started early last January when the Professor of Rural Development of the official Academy of Social Sciences, Yu Jianrong, known for its commitment to the disadvantaged, received a letter from a desperate mother who asked for help finding Yang Weixin your child over the Internet.