WITHOUT A TRACE

Off-grid commune where ‘kidnapped’ Alex Batty was ‘cut off from outside world’ as pics show ‘goddess-worshipping pals’

Alex has reportedly been living in a rural 'spiritual community' in the Pyrenees mountains in caravans and tents with Melanie and David

A BRITISH boy allegedly kidnapped by his mum and grandad is understood to have been living in an off-grid commune with goddess-worshipping pals.

Alex Batty, now 17, was found alive in France after fleeing the nomadic "spiritual community" in the mountains on foot.

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The 'spiritual community' where Alex Batty stayed with his mum and grandad reportedly has no schoolsCredit: Greater Manchester Police
Friends of Alex on Facebook include people who appear to live off-grid and practice rituals and meditationCredit: Facebook
The boy, then 11, was on holiday with his mum Melanie (pictured) in 2017 but never returned to the UKCredit: PA:Press Association
Lorry driver Fabien Accidini said he spotted the teenager on WednesdayCredit: Sky

Alex, then 11, was travelling in Spain with his mum and grandad in 2017 when he vanished without a trace.

He was found alive and well on Thursday after hiking through the Pyrenees mountains for days to escape the "spiritual" commune where he'd been living for the past years.

Located in the remote Pyrenean valleys, the society is reportedly "cut off and has no schools".

Members are also understood to travelling about from place to place in an itinerant commune, a police source told the BBC.

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Friends of Alex on Facebook appear to live off-grid and practice rituals, meditation and yoga.

Their posts refer to "Gaia", the Greek earth goddess and they praise the creation of "sustainable and abundant communities".

As investigations take place, Alex did not make any references to any sort of cult or sect-like lifestyle, but was said to describe "a life in community" with his mother and grandfather, reported.

Simone Risch, president of Infos Sectes, is used to collecting testimonies from those who escape cult-like societies.

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Speaking to the French outlet, he said: "The break with society, children out of school, social isolation and life in self-sufficiency are often the beginnings of a shift towards a sectarian movement”.

“If the choice of an alternative and itinerant lifestyle does not in itself constitute a sectarian drift, we must still remain vigilant about the evolution of these organisations.

"Some are renewed very quickly, through social networks and can show another face."

It's understood the first words Alex said to a lorry driver who picked him up on the side of the road were: "My mother kidnapped me when I was 12 years old".

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The British teen is also said to have told the lorry driver who rescued him that his mother "is a little crazy".

But the boy is refusing to tell prosecutors where he has been living for the last six years, or where his mum is hiding out, the reports.

Fabien Accidini, a student from Toulouse who has a part-time job delivering medicines by lorry, said he spotted the English teenager on Wednesday. 

Mr Accidini told : "He was walking while the rain fell in heavy drops. The second time I passed him, I decided to offer to drop him off somewhere.

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