This made me mad
http://www.birminghammail.net/news/top-stories/2012/02/23/moseley-schoolboy-stranded-miles-from-home-in-cotteridge-after-catching-wrong-bus-home-to-moseley-97319-30387761/Moseley schoolboy stranded miles from home in Cotteridge after catching wrong bus home to Moseley
Mkya Brown
A 10-YEAR-old boy was left terrified and in tears when he was stranded three miles from home after catching the wrong bus from school.
Mum Ebony Hancock has hit out after claiming passersby ignored pleas for help from distraught son Mkya.
The Severne Primary School pupil should have caught the 11A bus in Acocks Green and travelled three miles home to Moseley.
But he stepped aboard the 11C instead and ended up travelling 20 MILES around Birmingham, before getting off at Cotteridge.
Despite being clearly upset, passersby did not stop to help the little schoolboy who had no mobile phone to call his worried mum.
Miss Hancock, 29, said: ‘‘He was crying his heart out, but people were just walking past him.
‘‘He went into some shops but nobody would lend him a phone.
“He went to the door of a McDonald’s and said, ‘Can anybody help me,’ but no one answered.”
Meanwhile, the worried mum had called police after her son’s no-show at home at the usual time of 4.15pm.
“All he wants to do after school is come home and have his tea,” she said. “He’s very disciplined.
“I was being sick.’’
His mum and cops began searching the area near her home in a patrol car.
As darkness fell Mkya walked to Kings Norton before eventually finding a telephone box and dialling a taxi firm to take him home.
He arrived back at his house at 6.45pm, when a family member rang his mum to tell her the good news.
“I want to celebrate how proud I am of my son,” said Miss Hancock.
“I am so lucky that the wrong person didn’t stop.
“But there was no compassion at all from anybody.”
Peter Hopkins, head teacher at Severne Primary School, said: “We tell our children that if they feel in danger... to go into a place with lots of people and ask for help. He did exactly that.
“He was lost and in distress, and people just minded their own business.”
The teacher said the way Mkya had been ignored was “appalling – it’s a very sad state of affairs.”
A West Midlands Police spokeswoman confirmed that officers had conducted searches around Mkya’s home address and near his school.
“Police were informed that the child had returned home at 6.45pm, having got lost after boarding the wrong bus to travel home from school,” the spokeswoman said.
A spokesman for National Express said they were investigating.
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