So in they flew, Malik and his wife and their two children, with a stopover in Brussels and a connecting flight to Cairo. They knew what to do: miss the flight, then report to the airport authorities and ask for asylum.
It turns out that Belgium has an "airport track" for asylum seekers, and that it becomes very fast when minor children are involved. Malik and his family were first made to wait, and yes, after a long flight from the US and with two small children that's not a joke.
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But at the end of that wait, the system kicked into gear. The family was put into a car and driven to a building in the airport's region. They were given the keys to an apartment, some money to buy food and information on where to buy it, and told to get some rest.
That weekend, my girlfriend, who had taken point on the whole Malik initiative, went to meet the family and take Malik and the children to Antwerp (one of the adults is supposed to be in the provided apartments at all time).
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