
Police said that a woman was charged with neglected children in New Zealand after a two -year -old girl was found inside a bag in the bus cabin on Sunday.
The bus driver said this discovery during a limited station in Kayaka, a city in North Land.
Harrison, Acting Crime Director in Winnmata Province in Auckland, said that the suspect asked to reach the cabin during the stop, the acting manager of the crime in the Oakland-Celsius.
“The driver became worried when he noticed that the bag was moving,” he said. “When the driver opened the bag, they discovered the two -year -old.”
Harrison said that a young child had been taken to the hospital for a “intense medical evaluation” that was failed to “very hot, but he seemed to have been physically unjust.”
He said that the suspect, a 27 -year -old woman whose name was arrested and was charged with “poor treatment/neglect” of the child. He added that there are other charges that are not excluded.
Harrison said it was worthy of the court on Monday.
It is not clear why the child was in a bag. Entrada Travel Group, which runs the national bus line in New Zealand, has recognized the accident that the accident involves one of its buses.
Bus line He says online Children who reach two years travel for free if they do so in the bosom of the trustee. Children may travel 3 or larger with guardians, but that requires a child’s ticket, and it is usually sold at a very reduced rate.
“We are familiar with an accident that included one of their passengers in one of our services,” said the Inda group. “The police were called to respond and investigate the matter. No one was hurt during the accident, and the service resumed.”
She could not comment more amid the continuous investigation.
Harrison praised the bus driver for being aware and taking measures.
“We would like to recognize the bus driver and commend it, who noticed something that was not true and took immediate measures, and preventing what could have been a much worse result,” he said.
Kaiwaka is about 60 miles north of Auckland along the country’s central artery, highway 1.