MOUNT LAUREL, N.J., Aug. 21, 2008

U.S. Dad Gets Girls Back From Georgia

N.J. Daughters Were Stranded With Grandparents For Two Weeks After Russian Invasion

  • Congressman Christopher Smith, right, joins Joseph Evans, center, who hugs his wife Teah Evans as they pose with pictures of their daughters Sophia, 3, right, and Ashley, 7, following a broadcast taping in New York. The two little girls from New Jersey have been reunited with their father on Aug. 21, 2008 after being trapped by violence in the Republic of Georgia for two weeks. Photo

    Congressman Christopher Smith, right, joins Joseph Evans, center, who hugs his wife Teah Evans as they pose with pictures of their daughters Sophia, 3, right, and Ashley, 7, following a broadcast taping in New York. The two little girls from New Jersey have been reunited with their father on Aug. 21, 2008 after being trapped by violence in the Republic of Georgia for two weeks.  (AP PHOTO)

(CBS/ AP)  Two little girls from New Jersey have been reunited with their father after being trapped by violence in the Republic of Georgia for two weeks.

They arrived at the U.S. Embassy in Tbilisi after a six-hour ride in a vehicle with French Ambassador Eric Fournier. They were greeted with McDonald's Happy Meals and cake.

Fournier said in a telephone interview that the girls, 7-year-old Ashley and 3-year-old Sophia Evans, got through a checkpoint in the town of Gori after getting permission to keep traveling from a Russian general.

The girls' father, Joseph Evans, said they'll be back home in Howell - and reunited with their mother - within a few days.

Ashley Evans, who is about to start second grade, says she misses "everything" about being home.

"We're all on clouds over here," said U.S. Rep. Chris Smith, who orchestrated the girls' passage.

The girls, whose mother grew up in Georgia, have spent a part of most summers there visiting their maternal grandparents on their farm.

This summer, their parents took them in June and their grandmother was to bring them to New Jersey on Aug. 26. But Russian troops invaded the former Soviet republic and cut off passage within the country.

Joseph Evans, a New Jersey Transit bus driver, says his younger daughter did not understand what was going on, but the older one did. He said she told him on the phone: "I want to go home, the Russian troops are here."

But he said the girls were able to keep playing on the farm and remained several miles from any violence.

This week, Smith, a New Jersey Republican who has been involved in human rights efforts around the world for decades, flew to Georgia to seek help getting them out. Fournier was willing to help.

Traveling with members of an aid group, he reached them around 8 a.m. local time Thursday. The passage back to the capital included about 10 checkpoints and took six hours, Fournier said.

At the checkpoint where they were stalled, the ambassador started working his phone. "We were calling military, diplomats, everybody," he said.

Finally, he said, a Russian general called and gave them permission to pass.

The U.S. State Department is monitoring about 30 U.S. citizens under 18 who are in Georgia without their parents.

In addition to Ashley and Sophia Evans, there are several other children from New Jersey who are stuck in war-torn Georgia without their parents, Congressman Smith told The Asbury Park Press.

A total of about 10 families in predicaments similar to the Evanses' have contacted Smith's office asking for help, said Mary McDermott Noonan, Smith's spokeswoman. She added that not all of those families live in Smith's district, which includes parts of Monmouth, Ocean, Burlington and Mercer counties.

Smith said he wants to set up a corridor for American children, along with the sick and disabled to be able to get out of violent areas.

Joseph Evans said next summer, his daughters might not visit their grandparents. "Man, this is about it for me," he said. "I think I'll take them to the beach next summer."

© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Add a Comment
by dbstevens August 21, 2008 10:34 AM PDT
It''s always touching to hear a story like this where someone goes out of their way to help someone in distress. But the pleasure of the story is severly tainted by the knowledge that millions of people in similar, and worse, situations never get any help at all because of the horrifying things that governments do to their people. It''s just the ones that somehow manage to get media attention, so that whomever offers assistance gets to be a public hero. I''m glad these girls are home but what about everyone else?
Reply to this comment
by jennmarikp August 21, 2008 11:44 AM PDT
I am happy for the family. It could have turned into a bad situation. It''s nice to hear that support was there to help them get their children back.
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