Teenager Alex Batty ‘wanted to travel to UK for ID papers to start school’

The family Alex Batty had been staying with in a remote farmhouse in the French Pyrenees have released a statement


Teenager Alex Batty, who has been found in France six years after he disappeared, wanted to “return to the UK” and find identity documents to enable him to start school.

The youngster went missing aged 11 in 2017 after his mother, who was not his legal guardian, took him on a pre-arranged trip to Spain with his grandfather.

He landed in the UK on Saturday evening having been found walking across the Pyrenees, and police are considering whether to conduct a criminal investigation into his disappearance.

The family he had been staying with in a remote farmhouse in the French Pyrenees said Alex wanted to return to the UK to get documents so that he could study computer science at school, according to a statement on Facebook.

They said Alex had been living on-and-off in their remote mountain farmhouse since autumn 2021, where his grandfather, David Batty, worked as a handyman in exchange for room and board for he and Alex.

Owners of Gite de la Bastide, Frederic Hambye and Ingrid Beauve, said Alex’s mother, Melanie Batty, did not live at the property and during that time she stayed in “successive places of residence between Aude and Ariege” – around 50 kilometres north and 120 kilometres west of the farmhouse.

In the statement, they said: “As far as we know, she (Ms Batty) was looking for a place to live in a community. La Bastide does not have this ambition. Nor are we a spiritual community.”

The statement added: “As time went on, we saw him as part of our family and we think he appreciated the stability and security we represent for him.

“We encouraged him to learn French and study.

"In particular, we helped him find a school where he could be admitted without prior education. He showed a certain aptitude for computers.

“He was eager to go to school and get back to a normal life – and for that he needed his ID which he told us he no longer had.


'He may now be six years older than when he went missing, but he is still a young person,' Assistant Chief Constable Matt Boyle told reporters on Saturday


“When we learned that he did not have an ID, we offered to drive him to the British Consulate. He told us he would find a way to return to the UK on his own to get new [identity] papers and go back to school.

"To this end, he told us, he left on December 17 to join his mother."

They said they knew Alex as Zach and he arrived at the gite with his grandfather and mother, though Ms Batty was said to have never lived there.

During his stays, Alex had his own room, unlimited free internet access, and freedom to come and go as he pleased, they said – adding that he also liked to cook, participate in life at the gite and enjoyed cycling and visiting the beach.

They said he also got on well with the pair’s children and ate dishes prepared by Ms Beauve and Mr Hambye’s that included beef stew, chocolate cake and pasta bolognese.

Alex would reportedly accompany the couple to the nearby market to buy tuna sandwiches and meet his mother, with whom Ms Beauve and Mr Hambye said they had little contact.

The pair said the boy stayed for “some longer and shorter periods” and would also visit his mother.

The property is in Camps-sur-l’Agly, they said, a commune that had a population of 51 people in 2020, according to the French census.

Tourists, hikers, cyclists and horseback riders travelling in the area are said to visit the site.

Alex has returned to family in Greater Manchester, where he was living as a young boy before he disappeared, and police say is “where he wants to be”.

His grandmother Susan Caruana previously said she “can’t wait” to see him.


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