Disappearance of Rahma el-Dennaoui


Rahma el-Dennaoui is a Lebanese Australian girl who went missing on 10 November 2005, when 19 months old. She was last seen early that morning in the bedroom of her home in Lurnea, Sydney, Australia, where she and her siblings slept. Despite a police search and investigation, appeals to the general public and a coronial inquest in 2012, no trace has been found of the child as of 2019.
NSW Police have posted a reward of A$250,000 for information which would help to close the case.

Background

Rahma was born to Hosayn el-Dennaoui, a migrant from Iaal, Lebanon, and Alyaa, from the nearby village of Dayranbouh.

Disappearance

What happened

Rahma was sleeping between two of her sisters on a double bed under the window on the night of 9 November 2005. She had trouble sleeping in the heat and her father got up and went to check on her at 2am. When he returned at 8am, she was gone. Rahma had only learned to walk quite recently, and it is nearly from the El-Dennaoui home to any bushland. There was a rip in the fly screen covering the window above her bed, and this opening was large enough for Rahma to fit through. Other sources say the screen was cut, not torn.
Her three-year-old sister told police that she saw her sister being taken by an abductor who didn't have any hands.

Police investigation

Police treated the case as a potential abduction after an extensive search brought no further clues or sightings of the girl. Sniffer dogs found no trace of the little girl.

2012 inquest

After coronial inquest which ran from April to November 2012, Deputy State Coroner Sharon Freund handed down an open finding. She reported that there had been shortcomings and issues with the police investigation of both the family and a suspected pedophile who lived nearby.

Rewards

In May 2007, New Idea magazine offered a $20,000 reward "for information leading to Rahma's safe return". The magazine's editor-in-chief Robyn Foster said that it was the similarities between Rahma and the highly publicised case of Madeleine McCann that sparked her interest in the case.
In January 2019, NSW Police posted a $250,000 reward for information which would help to close the case.

Fraser Anning uses photo

Om 12 May 2019 Fraser Anning, an Australian senator running for re-election in the 2019 Australian federal election, used a photo of the el-Dennaoui family on his Facebook page. An official post featuring two photographs, one of the el-Dennaouis and another of a white family with a boy holding an Australian flag, and the words "If you want a Muslim for a neighbour, just vote Labor", with the Party logo below, appeared on his Facebook page. The photo apparently used in a 2010 Daily Telegraph article, when appeals were being made for information following the girl's disappearance. The post was deleted the following day, but not before it had attracted a number of negative comments after Mariam Veiszadeh and others had tweeted about it.