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Six Burundi teens reported missing in Washington

Six teenagers from the Burundi robotics team, who had come to Washington to compete in an international competition, were reported…

Six teenagers from the Burundi robotics team, who had come to Washington to compete in an international competition, were reported missing to D.C. police on Wednesday, according to police reports.

The team from the small east African country had competed in the inaugural international event of the FIRST Global Challenge robotics competition, which drew hundreds of young people from 157 nations to Constitution Hall in Northwest. The event opened Sunday with a parade of nations and closed Tuesday at around 6:30 p.m.

Police posted fliers of the missing teens on the department’s Twitter account, which stated the teens were last seen in the area 5 p.m. Tuesday, around the time the final robotics matches finished.

The missing teenagers range in age from 16 to 18 and include four males and two females, police said.

“FIRST Global learned the adult mentor of Team Burundi is unable to find the group of six students of the team who participated in the 2017 FIRST Global Challenge,” according to a statement from an organization spokesman early Thursday.

“The proper reports have been submitted to the police who are investigating the case,” said spokesman Jose P. Escotto.

Escotto said FIRST Global President Joe Sestak, a former Navy admiral and congressman, called police after receiving word from the team’s mentor, Canesius Bindaba, that the teens had gone missing. Sestak then called a volunteer who helped Bindaba file a report with police.

Bindaba is listed in a previous press report as a team coach.

Officials from the Burundi Embassy in Washington could not immediately be reached late Wednesday.

A State Department spokesman referred all questions to local authorities.

According to six identical police reports, one filed for each missing teen, a mentor to the teens told the event volunteer the group went missing and that volunteer called police. The mentor later reported that “they traveled from Burundi Africa for the competition. They have one-year visas,” the reports state.

In each report, Bindaba told police that each teen “went missing after the competition and he does not know where he could have went.”

Police said they canvassed Constitution Hall with 2nd District officers but did not find the teens.

Each report said that police attempted to contact an uncle from one missing teen but received no response.

Escotto said he believed the Burundi team members had attended closing ceremonies which began at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday.

“Security of the students is of paramount importance to FIRST Global,” the organizer’s statement said. “FIRST Global ensures that all students get to their dormitories after the daily competition by providing safe transportation to the students staying at Trinity Washington University who are always to be under close supervision of their adult mentor and are advised not to leave the premises unaccompanied by the mentor.”

A spokesman for the university was not immediately available Thursday morning.

This week’s competition had already garnered global headlines after a group of teenage girls from Afghanistan faced a plight to get visas to travel to the U.S. because of President Trump’s recently implemented travel ban. Organizers had previously hosted domestic competitions, but this was the first international event.