The surprising disappearance of Sudska Konki came when thousands of students prepare to travel on their own spring break.
College student Sudsakski disappears on a spring break journey
The search is underway for a 20 -year -old student, Sudesha Konki, who disappeared from the Punta Cana Resort.
- Sudkaksha Konki, a student at Pittsburg University, went missing during a spring break in the Dominican Republic.
- Konki’s disappearance has been similar to the Natalie Holve case since 2005, which raises concerns about the safety of students’ travel.
- Authorities are investigating Konki’s disappearance, but he has not classified him as a culprit, while his father has urged him to consider the possibility of kidnapping.
- The incident has given rise to anxiety for some parents and students to plan a spring break, but travel agencies report the minimum cancellation.
One night in the Caribbean. Foundation monitoring footage. A mysterious disappearance. Troubled parents demand answers. Familiar sound?
Sudsaksha Konki, a student at the University of Pittsburg, was fired from a coast of Dominican Republic last Thursday when five friends on Spring Brake. Authorities say he was last seen with a man who is believed to be found in the Punta Kina resort in the town.
The preliminary details of his case are like the disappearance of another American student about 20 years ago. On May 30, 2005, Natali Holga did not return to her hotel room after drinking alcohol with friends in Aruba on a graduate traveling from her high school. His murder will not be resolved for more than a decade.
At the last moments of Holay, questions around the country gained the attention of the entire country for the day, weeks and years – to dominate 24/7 news cycle, impress dozens of books and documentary films, and help to increase America’s obsession with real crimes.
Holway’s mother, Bait Holve, told Fox News that she hopes the US embassy in the Dominican Republic will help Konki’s family find answers.
“This family is so fortunate that there is an American embassy to work, I didn’t have that in Aruba,” said Holve. “Certainly they are checking cameras from hotels, gas stations, traffic lights, store fronts and wherever food, cameras from any casino bases, beach areas.”
Natalie Holve’s echoes
The Holvey case raised fears about traveling abroad to many young Americans, especially women and their parents. The idea that the tragedy could stand in a place that looked like a paradise was a “disturbing” for an American people who had associated with tourism safety, saying that a professor of crime at Ferry Dickinson’s University and Podcast Women and Crime, Amy and Crime, said.
The Holvey was traveling on a high school graduation with a large group of students when it died. On May 29, 2005, on his last night in Aruba – he and some friends went to a local bar to pick up drinks. The Holvey was seen going along a group of men, including a Dutch young man named Jurran Wan Der Slot.
Van Der Slight initially denied any wrongdoing, but later confessed to killing Holvey in the confession in 2023. He said that after rejecting his sexual progress, he threw a monkey block while they were both alone on the beach. His body has never been found.
Officials investigating Konki’s disappearance, said he was last seen on the beach with his friends on Thursday. Authorities have said that five women were shown in the surveillance footage and one person departs from the beach at around 6 o’clock. But Koni allegedly left behind a man named Joshua Rib, who met him on the island. The surveillance video showed him departing from the beach area without hours.
Local authorities are not labeled Konki’s case as a criminal investigation. His father has asked investigators to consider several powers of his disappearance, including the abduction.
Schlosberg said that the ability to “awaken” many problems traveling in the story of Konki, which Holvey’s disappearance mobilized in a new generation of youths.
“Even though something like this happened 20 years ago, it is not a matter of past 20 years ago, these things are still happening,” said Shloosberg.
Are parents, students worried about spring break travel?
Search #Pantakana And #SPringBreak on #Tektok, and you will find dozens of videos of Gedi College students who pack for their trip and wait for friends to ride their flights. Some people hesitated about Travelin because of Koni’s disappearance. On Facebook, a parent asked if the Dominican Republic trip this week would be safe for his daughter.
Vice President of STS Travel, Jack Jacobson, is an agency that has books for spring intervals for students from 5000 to 10,000, told USA Today that they have called by nerve parents, but “very few” students have canceled their travel plans after they have been canceled.
His advice for them: Weigh the facts and decide which makes the most comfortable.
“Now, there are 1000 college students who are down with good time. Jacobson said,” We tell them.
Jacobson said that the destination of the Dominican Republic should not be tarnished by this incident.
“We are all very worried, and we all want to know what is happening, and we will want to know soon, instead, our heart goes to the family,” said Jacobson. “As far as people want to travel, we have to update them about current information.”
Partners