on 10-12-2014 02:27 PM
I wonder, is it different if your dad is a policeman?
Ms Bishop has done a good job here. I wonder why the parents of other drug traffickers, who said it wasn't their drugs, didn't get the same help?
on 10-12-2014 08:03 PM
@lloydslights wrote:The 22 year old woman (Kalynda) went to China for a 3 day trip?????
After meeting a guy 5 days before????
The limited media coverage and story is very similar to that of the "Antz Pantz" model who was arrested/rescued/released years ago from Bali.
Michelle Leslie.
I imagine there would be a "scale of assistance" offered by DFAT and/or legal representatives dependent upon funds available.
For her to be released now, appears to indicate that Kalynda was innocent and funds were available to realize that sooner than later.
DEB
Still, odd but it was longer than 5 days "She reportedly met Mr Gardiner weeks earlier on the dating app Tinder."
What funds?
on 10-12-2014 08:11 PM
Hi everyone, the discussion is getting a little heated. Please be sure to keep your communications civil. Thanks!
10-12-2014 08:13 PM - edited 10-12-2014 08:13 PM
I never go on any of those dating sites
on 10-12-2014 08:55 PM
@icyfroth wrote:I never go on any of those dating sites
why would you? aren't you married?
I suspect it is who you know, what you know, rather than just being given assistance as a detained person.....
As for the guy who has been sentenced, there was ample time beforehand for DFAT to negotiate.
Her behaviour is suspect.
10-12-2014 09:41 PM - edited 10-12-2014 09:45 PM
az: As for the guy who has been sentenced, there was ample time beforehand for DFAT to negotiate.
The guy she was with? NZ born.. travelling on NZ passport? (he is a dual citizen) NZ providing Consular assistance.
A spokesman for the New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade said this evening that Gardiner remained in custody in China and had legal representation.
"Consular assistance is being provided to Peter Gardiner by the New Zealand Consulate-General in Guangzhou," the spokesman said.
"The Consul-General has visited Mr Gardiner in the detention centre to provide consular advice and check on his well-being."
az - Her behaviour is suspect.
Yes, it was. I would like to know what caused her to go into hiding (for want of a better word) when her parents reported her missing to the police. The media keep publishing that she had attended Christian schools etc.. as if you can't turn out bad because of that.
icy... I am sure there is no age limit for the Tinder dating app, but it is mainly used by young people...hopefully ones that aren't already in a relationship.
on 10-12-2014 10:25 PM
am*3 wrote:icy... I am sure there is no age limit for the Tinder dating app, but it is mainly used by young people...hopefully ones that aren't already in a relationship.
Oh right well I guess that's why I don't go on Tinder then. Do you?
on 10-12-2014 10:42 PM
@icyfroth wrote:
am*3 wrote:icy... I am sure there is no age limit for the Tinder dating app, but it is mainly used by young people...hopefully ones that aren't already in a relationship.
Oh right well I guess that's why I don't go on Tinder then. Do you?
No, never heard of it, until that girl from NZ went over the balcony on the Gold Coast and died, in the apartment of a guy she met on Tinder (Gabe Tostee).
on 10-12-2014 11:07 PM
Kalynda Davis' family breaks silence on China drug nightmare
The father of a Sydney woman detained in China has broken his silence over her ordeal.
Kalynda Davis returned to her Glenmore Park home on Monday after being detained in China for nearly a month, where she was accused of trying to smuggle up to 75 kilograms of ice out of the country.
On Wednesday, Mr Davis told Penrith paper the Western Weekender that he was informed of his daughter's release on December 5.
He said he immediately boarded a plane to Guangzhou on Saturday morning to bring home his youngest child.
"When I saw her for the first time, I just collapsed. She didn't know that I was coming either. She kept saying 'I'm sorry dad, I didn't do it, I didn't do it, I didn't do it'," the paper reported Mr Davis as saying.
"When we hit the tarmac in Sydney, we both just cried."
Friends celebrated Kalynda's return with tears and hugs on Wednesday, bringing gifts to the family's home and posting happy snaps of the former private school girl, as mystery surrounded her sudden and secretive release from China.
The Davis family reported their daughter missing in November. Days later, she surfaced in custody in China. She had been arrested at Guangzhou airport with her travelling partner, New Zealander Peter Gardner, who is still in custody in China.
Facing accusations that it had failed to secure the release of Mr Gardner, the New Zealand government revealed that Australian officials did not negotiate with their Chinese counterparts over Ms Davis' release and had nothing to do with it.
Earlier reports suggested that Australian Foreign Affairs Minister Julie Bishop had played a role in a delicate diplomatic rescue operation involving weeks of intense negotiations by Australian consular officials in China.
Ms Davis' parents had thanked the Australian consulate-general and staff in China on Tuesday for their "dedication and work in negotiating with the Chinese government and authorities".
Mr Gardner, 25, is has lived in Sydney for many years. He went to Richmond High School and worked for a local building company.
New Zealand's consul-general has visited him in a detention centre in Guangzhou and said he was being supported by his family and legal representatives.
It is not yet clear why Ms Davis was released but Mr Gardner wasn't.
On Wednesday, Mr Davis told the Western Weekender his daughter had planned a trip overseas to visit New Zealand but she changed her plans at the last minute to head to China for a few days. He believed she was then to come home to Sydney before continuing her holiday in New Zealand.
He said he and his wife, Jenny, became concerned on November 10 when they realised their daughter had not accessed her Facebook account. Police then advised them that she had not boarded her return flight from China to Sydney.
On November 12, Mr and Mrs Davis were told their daughter had been detained in China and was being investigated for drug trafficking. They were told the investigation would last for 30 days and the results would be forwarded to prosecutors, who would lay any charges.
Ms Davis was not allowed any contact with the outside world, had her long hair cut short into a bob, and was shackled during her time in detention. She had told her father that while the facilities weren't of a high standard, her treatment by Chinese authorities was "very respectful" and "incredible".
Mr and Mrs Davis said that during their daughter's detention they received very little information.
"I don't know what I have been feeling this past month, it is like I have been brain-dead," Mr Davis told the paper.
"Think of a parent's worst nightmare and multiply it by 10, that's what we went through. I know my daughter, I know my daughter – it was just my worst nightmare."
10-12-2014 11:48 PM - edited 10-12-2014 11:51 PM
....no mention of the intended 3 day trip to China.......very suss in imo. I mean who goes to any country for an intended 3 day visit?
Obviously a bribe was paid for her release.
This is the unofficial accepted form of negotiation over there. Fact.
on 11-12-2014 08:05 AM
@freddie*rooster wrote:
@aps1080 wrote:
And, the point of that link was ????
apart from showing the media blow it out of all proportion. she was not facing a death sentance, she hadn't even been effing charged for god sake.
FMD, CARP reprting.
Just like you appear to get a kick out of being aggressive with your replies the point of the link was to show where the information I posted came from.
This isn't what I posted why change what I said? Just remove the post if it's deemed to breach policy.