In the Russian Federation, two more underage citizens left without parental care were brought back to Uzbekistan with the assistance of the staff of the Temporary Detention Center for Juvenile Delinquents of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in Moscow. The National Agency for Social Protection reported this.
As it turns out, one of the returned children had gone to the Russian Federation based on a power of attorney from his parents.
The other has been in labor migration since 2023, and while still being a 9th-grade student, went to Moscow with his sister's husband, initially working as a janitor, and later as a dishwasher in a coffee shop.
Both citizens were sent to the Temporary Detention Center for Juvenile Delinquents during a police raid.
At this point: We remind you that a power of attorney issued for monitoring children from the territory of Uzbekistan does not grant the right to be a legal representative of the child in another country's territory.
For your information: To date, 9 underage children have been returned to their homeland. In March, in collaboration with the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and the National Agency for Social Protection, plans are underway to bring back children deprived of parental care from abroad to Uzbekistan and practical measures are being considered for their return to a family environment.