There were no tears when Sally Faulkner said goodbye to her children, there were just smiles and laughter.
At a play centre in Beirut the final leg of this painful saga has been played out – but not before her former husband, Ali Elamine, tried one last legal manoeuvre attempting to have the children’s Australian nationalities eliminated from their passport and changed to solely Lebanese.
Sally Faulkner was now just a desperate mother saying good-bye to her two children, a three-year-old and a five-year-old she risked everything to win back – but lost.
As the 60 Minutes crew of Tara Brown, producer Stephen Rice, cameraman Ben Williamson and sound recordist David Ballment landed at Sydney airport late last night Sally Faulkner was allowed to meet with her children, the first time she has seen them since she was involved in an elaborate plot to snatch them back.
At a Beirut play centre, with grimy seats and colourful walls she said goodbye.
The Australian reports that their father, now used to regularly speaking before the cameras, detailed the visit to media.
Elamine told of how Lahela, 5 and Noah, 3, ate ice cream with their mother and laughed before saying goodbye.
“The visit was good, Sal had fun, the kids had fun, that’s all that matters,” Ali Elamine said.
“She’s their mother and obviously they are going to enjoy time with her.”
Elamine told reporters that it was time Sally went home and left him with his children.
“She has absolutely moved on and there is no question that the children are better here with my family, they are my kids,” he said.
“She has started on a new life and has a new child three months old she needs to get back to the baby.”