PURNIA, Sept. 7 -- A six-year-old Nepali girl, who had gone missing from her home in Nepal in March and was later rescued from the nomadic Banjara community in Bihar's Purnia district in May, was finally repatriated to her parents in Nepal on Friday, police said. The girl's father had lodged a complaint with Nepal police in March, alleging that she had been trafficked. Her identity was established in an unusual way-through Nepalese currency she came across during her stay at a Specialized Adoption Centre in Purnia. "It was a striking coincidence that the rescued girl, who couldn't understand Hindi, encountered Nepalese currency during her stay. This gave us the first clue to her nationality and identity," said Sumit Prakash, chairperson of the Purnia Child Welfare Committee (CWC). "It is never easy to trace and repatriate rescued children to their real home." He said one of the employees noticed her alacrity towards Nepalese currency and spoke to her in the Nepalese language, confirming her origin. The NGO KIN India, which works to end human trafficking and gender-based violence, was then informed. KIN India representatives Naveen Joshi and Laxmi Bisht said, "We discovered that the girl's father had lodged a missing complaint with Rupandehi police in Lumbini province in March." Subsequently, KIN India coordinated with the Embassy of Nepal in Delhi and India's Ministry of External Affairs. With the efforts of both governments, the rescued girl was handed over to her parents in Nepal. The representatives expressed deep concern over rising cases of human trafficking along the India-Nepal border. "Recently, several minor girls were rescued from traffickers, but many cases remain unreported and require immediate attention from law enforcement authorities," they said....