Author Topic: Press articles to mark the 10th anniversary of Madeleine's disappearance.  (Read 5617 times)

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Offline Brietta

Madeleine McCann's mum writes moving letter to the people of Praia da Luz
"There will never be too many times to say thank you..."

BYALEXANDER BRITTONCLAIRE HAYHURST
11:55, 4 MAY 2017

The family of Madeleine McCann have said they “miss her every second” as they reflect on 10 years of “stolen time” without her.

Kate McCann wrote a letter to the people of Praia da Luz on May 3, exactly a decade after she vanished from their holiday apartment in the Algarve village.

Members of the congregation at the Church of Nossa Senhora da Luz wept as the letter from Mrs McCann was read at a special service.

The service, attended by about 40 people including those who helped search for the little girl in 2007, took place at 9pm - about the time that she disappeared.

Mrs McCann wrote: “To our dear friends.

“Ten years without Madeleine. If I’d let that thought even enter my head back in May 2007, I wouldn’t have lasted another day.

“And now, a decade on... it is still inconceivable. How can it be?

“Our little girl who brought us the gift of parenthood. Ten years on. We miss her every second.

“Despite the evil and hurt that has come our way, we have been very fortunate, having witnessed and experienced goodness and kindness in great abundance during this long and difficult period of ‘stolen’ time.

“We are especially grateful to our friends and supporters in Luz for being strong enough and brave enough to keep Madeleine and our family in your prayers and in your hearts.

“Your love and compassion has given us fortitude over the years and sustained our hope in immeasurable amounts.

“There will never be too many times to thank you... and so ‘thank you’ for everything... but above all, for not giving up on Madeleine.

“With our love and our very best wishes, Kate, Gerry, Madeleine, Sean and Amelie - and all our family.”

The letter was read at the 40-minute-long service - spoken in both English and Portuguese - by Susan Hubbard, a close friend of Mrs McCann.

Mrs Hubbard’s husband, Father Haynes Hubbard, was the priest at the church at about the time that Madeleine went missing.

Appeal posters and T-shirts were placed near the altar of the medieval church, along with candles that were lit throughout the service.

A minute’s silence was held for Madeleine and for all missing children at the start of the service, which is held at the church each year.

Father Hubbard told the congregation: “You might remember the first week after Madeleine was taken.

“We gathered here in this church and we lit this candle. We said that the light that this candle offers will not be put out.

“Then we went home and we remembered Madeleine in our prayers. And here we are. Ten years later. Remembering Madeleine in our prayers.

“Madeleine and all children who are in need of our prayers are held up in hope.

“We hold Madeleine in our hearts and all children who are lost. We pray for them.”

ellow ribbons, to signify hope, were placed around the village at the time of Madeleine’s disappearance.

At sunset, 10 balloons to mark the 10th anniversary were released on the beach at Praia da Luz.

A pink balloon was also tied to the gate of apartment 5A of the Ocean Club resort, where Madeleine vanished while her parents ate supper nearby.
http://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/news/liverpool-news/madeleine-mccanns-mum-writes-moving-12984693
"All I'm going to say is that we've conducted a very serious investigation and there's no indication that Madeleine McCann's parents are connected to her disappearance. On the other hand, we have a lot of evidence pointing out that Christian killed her," Wolter told the "Friday at 9"....

Offline John

What happened to Madeleine McCann? Five possible scenarios explained.



By Adam Lusher
Published 3rd May 2017

With interest in the case showing no signs of abating, the chances are that unless Madeleine is found, the theories will keep proliferating.

In the ten years since Madeleine McCann went missing from an apartment in the Ocean Club resort in Praia da Luz, Portugal, there have been a near-infinite number of theories as to what happened to her.

Having started reviewing the case in 2011, Scotland Yard are still investigating.

With interest in the case showing no signs of abating, the chances are that unless Madeleine is found, the theories will keep proliferating.

For now, though, the most commonly discussed scenarios seem to be:

The parents were involved

On September 7 2007, four months after Madeleine’s disappearance, Kate and Gerry McCann were made “arguidos”, formal suspects in the case.

The theory seems to have been that the two doctors killed their daughter by accident, possibly by giving her too much sedative in the hope that she would sleep while they went out to dine with friends at a tapas restaurant 50 yards away.

The McCanns are then supposed to have hidden the body, faked Madeleine’s abduction, and then, weeks later, with the search for the three-year-old in full cry, put the corpse in the boot of a hire car and hid it in some super-secret location.

The Portugese police appear to have been bolstered in the belief that this – or something like it – could be possible by the reactions of two sniffer dogs brought to the Algarve by British officers in July 2007.

The two dogs, one trained to detect human blood, the other the smell of dead bodies, were taken to numerous locations, but only gave alerts inside the McCanns’ holiday apartment.  The cadaver dog later gave another alert signal while inside the Renault Scenic hire car that the McCanns had rented 24 days after their daughter went missing.

Analysis of hair and other fibres taken from the hire car and apartment were analysed by the UK’s Forensic Science Service.  Four days after the FSS analysis was complete, the McCanns were made arguidos, with Portugese officials citing DNA evidence as one of the grounds for suspicion.

It later transpired, however, that neither the sniffer dog or DNA evidence were as watertight as some observers assumed.

Sniffer dog evidence has been the subject of research questioning its reliability, and in one US court case, a judge agreed with analysis of three cadaver dogs’ performances which found they were wrong 78 per cent, 71 per cent and 62 per cent of the time.

The DNA evidence, meanwhile, came with a major ‘health warning’ from the FSS.

An email from John Lowe, of the FSS team, stated that only 15 out of a set of 19 components of Madeleine’s DNA profile had been found in the hire car.

Mr Lowe cautioned: “The individual components in Madeleine's profile are not unique to her; it is the specific combination of 19 components that makes her profile unique above all others. Elements of Madeleine's profile are also present within the profiles of many of the scientists here in Birmingham, myself included.

“It's important to stress that 50 per cent of Madeleine's profile will be shared with each parent. It is not possible, in a mixture of more than two people, to determine or evaluate which specific DNA components pair with each other. ... Therefore, we cannot answer the question: Is the match genuine, or is it a chance match."

Kate and Gerry McCann had their formal arguido status removed in July 2008.  They have always maintained their innocence.  They have dismissed as “ludicrous” theories about how they might have used the hire car to dispose of the body in a location that Algarve locals didn’t know about.

They are also continuing their legal action against Goncalo Amaral, the former lead Portugese investigator in the case, who in 2008 wrote a book claiming they had faked their daughter’s abduction after her accidental death.

Burglary gone wrong

According to this theory, thieves broke into the apartment, then killed or abducted Madeleine when she woke up and saw what they were doing.

It is understood that the Scotland Yard review team has not yet ruled out such a scenario – even though you might expect it to involve thieves acting in panic, making hurried mistakes and leaving a trail of obvious clues in their wake.

At one time, though, the Met detectives had identified four Praia da Luz locals who seemed as if they might have fitted the bill.   Their backgrounds, mobile phone contact and locations around the time of Madeleine’s disappearance all seemed to fit the pattern of men involved in a burglary that had gone wrong.

The men were questioned in 2014 – but Scotland Yard has now announced there was no evidence to implicate any of them and abandoned the case against all four.

Paulo Ribeiro, one of the men, has also told BBC Panorama how amazed he had been when approached by British detectives.

"I thought it was incredible," he said. "I knew of nothing when the police arrived at my door with a piece of paper that had a drawing on it, saying it bore a likeness to me and that someone had said I was involved and that I looked like the person who had kidnapped Maddie.”

He and the other three men, were also backed by Pedro do Carmo, deputy director of the Policia Judiciaria, who told Panorama he had never considered them to be suspects.

He said: "I can only say that we questioned those people on request of the Metropolitan Police and only based on the request of the Metropolitan Police.

"We never questioned those people. We never saw or looked at those people as suspects of the crime."

And, despite British detectives still considering the idea of a burglary gone wrong to be plausible, Carlos Anjos, the former head of the Policia Judiciaria officers' union, told Panorama: "This burglary theory is absurd. Not even a wallet disappeared, no television disappeared, nothing else disappeared. A child disappeared."

Abducted or killed by a local paedophile

In 2009 there were reports that some of those investigating Madeleine’s disappearance believed the Algarve had been “awash with paedophiles” when she went missing.

One source was quoted as saying: “There are 38 known sex offenders in the Algarve.  The area is a magnet for paedophiles. There have been seven sexual assaults involving the children of tourists in the Algarve in the last four years.

“They all have the same modus operandi as Madeleine's disappearance - that is, a break-in at a holiday apartment and children molested.

“Five happened before Madeleine's abduction, and two afterwards. One took place a month before she vanished.”

Could a local serial paedophile have escalated his activities to the point where instead of leaving a molested foreign child in situ, they progressed to abduction or killing?

family:

"He was a private man, not the type to suddenly befriend  a couple who had intense media attention. It really jarred with me, left me feeling very uneasy.  Nobody else would have thought Freud capable of abuse and rape but he did it to me.”

Some investigators, however, have cautioned against the whole idea of the involvement of a local paedophile.  They point out that only very rarely do predatory paedophiles take the risk of sneaking or breaking into a building to get at a child.

Abducted by slave traders or paedophile child traffickers

There have been numerous variations of this theory, placing Madeleine in locations from Belgium to Africa.

In 2008, for example, it was reported that police were examining claims that Madeleine was taken on the orders of a Belgium-based paedophile ring that had placed an order for a “young girl”.

The highly organised gang, it was said, may even have taken a photograph of Madeleine beforehand so the Belgian paedophiles could confirm she fitted their requirements and give the go-ahead for the abduction.

Other theories have suggested Madeleine could have been taken to Lagos marina, five miles from Praia da Luz, and put on a boat bound for Morocco.

There have been reports of girls fitting Madeleine’s description being seen in Morocco around the time of her disappearance, and in the first few weeks of the hunt for their daughter, the McCanns did visit the north African country to appeal for information.

Morocco also fits into theories that Madeleine was sold into slavery: it is on the trafficking route to the Saharan desert country of Mauritania.

Mauritania was the last country in the world to abolish slavery, outlawing the practice only in 1981.  There are rumours that significant numbers of people remain in slavery in the country to this day, and that gangs operating out of Mauritania sell children to rich Middle Eastern families.

Colin Sutton, an ex-Scotland Yard detective, told the Mirror last month: “The Mauritania line is certainly a possibility and needs to be looked at.

“If someone wanted to get a three-year-old child into Africa it’s the obvious route. The infrastructure and contacts for people smuggling are clearly there.”

Madeleine woke up, wandered from the apartment, and was involved in an accident

If Madeleine had woken up and gone to see her parents at the tapas restaurant, it has been claimed, there were a number of potentially fatal accidents that could have befallen her.

If she lost her way in the dark and took a wrong turn, a walk of less than 200 yards would have taken her to some roadworks.

It has been reported that workers repairing drains had dug a 6ft-deep, 4ft-wide trench.  Had she fallen in, causing her to die or be knocked unconscious?  And had she then not been noticed when the trench was filled in the next morning?

This theory has been disputed by the engineer and the foreman in charge of the works, who have both insisted the trench was checked by them and the police.

Other accident theories have posited a drink driver who runs over Madeleine, panics, and hides the body.  A local might know hiding places where a body could lie undiscovered for ten years: the surrounding countryside is sparsely populated with plenty of scrubland and many old, long-abandoned wells.

Such scenarios, though, would require unusual behaviour from a little girl going in search of her parents.

Kate McCann has pointed out that Madeleine, coming up to her fourth birthday, would have had to have been able to open the curtains, slide open the patio door and then shut both of them behind her.  Then she would have had to open and shut the garden gate leading to the road.

During her holiday, she had got to know the way that took her to the pool complex where her parents were eating.  So why would this little girl have continued down the dark, lonely path leading to the roadworks, instead of turning towards the reassuring lights and noise coming from where she knew she could find her mum and dad?

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/madeleine-mccann-disappearance-latest-what-happened-scenarios-a7716436.html
« Last Edit: May 04, 2017, 02:21:09 PM by John »
A malicious prosecution for a crime which never existed. An exposé of egregious malfeasance by public officials.
Indeed, the truth never changes with the passage of time.

Offline Brietta

From Nick Cave to Kate McCann, it’s time we judged parents a little less
Hadley Freeman
Saturday 6 May 2017 09.00 BST

Parents of missing children are demonised by a public needing to reassure themselves it could never happen to them


Kate and Gerry McCann give an interview to the BBC to mark the 10th anniversary of Madeleine McCann. Photograph: Getty Images


This is a story about missing children, and what happens to those who are left behind. Last week marked the 10th anniversary of the disappearance of Madeleine McCann, a story told so many times it has taken on the form of a litany: Praia da Luz, the tapas restaurant, the open window. Madeleine vanished, but she is ever-present in the public consciousness, whereas thousands of missing children are just that – wholly missing.

There has been much hand-wringing in the media over this disparity: was it because Kate and Gerry McCann are white and photogenic? Or because Madeleine was blond and cute? Or because she vanished in a country where journalists also take their cute kids on holiday? To which the answers are yes, obviously, but this is to miss the point; the argument should be not that the McCanns deserve less attention, but that other missing children should get more. In an interview last weekend, Kate McCann said she felt “guilty” and “embarrassed” about the £11m spent on the search for her daughter. The only people who should be embarrassed are those who sneer that there should be some kind of cap on the amount of sympathy, or a time limit placed on a parent’s hope. In recent weeks, the tabloids have been eagerly publishing spurious decades-old sightings of Madeleine, seen crying for her mother in the company of “suspicious men”. It is hard to see what any of this is supposed to achieve, beyond torturing the McCanns.

The common take on the McCann coverage is that middle-class newspaper readers related to them and so cared more about the story than, say, that of Ben Needham, the British toddler who vanished in Kos in 1991. And yet in both cases the parents were instantly vilified: Kerry Needham for being working class, Gerry and Kate McCann for being too self-possessed and attractive. The parents of missing children are often demonised by a public that need to reassure themselves that this could never happen to them. Those parents were feckless, foolish, bad – not like us, the good parents. If anything, the relatability of the McCanns made them even more terrifying, and thus more necessary to condemn.

When Nick Cave’s 15-year-old son Arthur died in 2015, after falling off a cliff while on LSD, parts of the media were so keen to blame his father they became self-parodic. Much was made of the singer’s previous drug habit, as though no other parent on the planet had ever taken drugs, while the Times tutted that Cave had “an obsession with death” and watched “super-violent” films with his children. (The paper later removed the article from its website.)

In an extraordinary interview in American GQ, Cave recently said: “I don’t want to give too much oxygen to the matter of responsibility because it raises a point that only someone who knows nothing about parenting, drug-taking or bereavement would suggest.” Even so, he added: “You can find yourself indulging in all sorts of irrational and self-destructive thoughts – self-pity, self-blame – because they form a direct connection to the small but present part of you that just wants to die.”

I have written a lot about missing or dead children: Etan Patz, the six-year-old who vanished in New York in 1979, and whose face haunted American parents in the 80s; JonBenét Ramsey, the six-year-old beauty contestant found dead in her home in 1996; Noah Pozner, the youngest victim of the 2012 Sandy Hook shootings. All very different stories, all connected by a vilification of the parents by a public so terrified of anything like that happening to them. A police officer once described it to me like this: “You know that moment when you lose sight of your child in a shopping mall? Imagine that feeling lasting for 30 years.” But there is no need for anyone to pull an Andrea “as a mother” Leadsom here; anyone can feel that fear, as if your arm has been ripped off your body and your heart pulled out after it.

The cynical take on Madeleine McCann is that she is gone for good: why are we still talking about this? “Her parents need to accept their share of the blame and let her go,” one notoriously bilious columnist wrote. There is a condescension towards parents of missing children and their magical thinking, their desperate hope that the family will one day be reunited. But it’s their critics who are engaging in the worst kind of magical thinking, believing that if they turn bereaved parents into the demonised Other, they will protect their own children. All they are doing, really, is revealing that they know the terrible truth: that this could happen to any of us, and we would never stop looking.

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/may/06/nick-cave-to-kate-mccann-time-judged-parents-less
"All I'm going to say is that we've conducted a very serious investigation and there's no indication that Madeleine McCann's parents are connected to her disappearance. On the other hand, we have a lot of evidence pointing out that Christian killed her," Wolter told the "Friday at 9"....

Offline John

BBC shows clip of people searching with binoculars before Madeleine McCann documentary, angering viewers.



The 10-second video shows a group of people standing with binoculars searching for something in the distance

By Shehab Khan
Published 5 May 2017

BBC viewers reacted with anger and bemusement as a strange clip was shown before a documentary on Madeleine McCann.

The ten-second clip shows a group of people standing in a field with binoculars searching for something in the distance.

As the brief video played, a voice over is heard introducing the documentary about the search going on for Madeleine.

“Now on BBC One, the search goes on in a case like no other. Madeleine McCann, 10 years on,” the voiceover says.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/madeleine-mccann-bbc-documentary-binoculars-clip-angers-viewers-a7718671.html
A malicious prosecution for a crime which never existed. An exposé of egregious malfeasance by public officials.
Indeed, the truth never changes with the passage of time.

Offline ShiningInLuz

http://www.dailystar.co.uk/news/latest-news/611238/maddie-mccann-disappearance-10-year-anniversary-portugal-preacher-parents-kate-gerry 

This shows the 9pm service on 3 May 2017 at Nossa Senhora da Luz.
Maddie McCann preacher speaks 10 years after comforting parents following disappearance
THE preacher who comforted the parents of Madeleine McCann has spoken out about the case near the scene of her disappearance.

By Michael Havis, in Praia da Luz / Published 4th May 2017
Chrissy Teigen teases performance on Lip Syn


Father Haynes Hubbard became Anglican Father at Nessa Senhora da Luz church just days after Maddie vanished from her bed.

He recalls how the church, which serves the Portuguese resort of Praia da Luz, where the McCanns stayed, was engulfed.

"There were four or five rows of photographers taking pictures of Kate, Gerry and the church," he told Daily Star Online.

"It sounded like applause as Kate and Gerry left church, but it wasn't applause, it was cameras flashing.

"And then it got really nasty, really personal and really unpleasant. It was tough times."

Tough as times were, however, Father Hubbard says it was worth it to keep Maddie in the spotlight.

"I think Kate and Gerry have paid a tremendous price. I know they did for the first two or three years," he said.

"But they were prepared to pay that because it suggested that people might still be looking for their daughter."

And he believes the price will be worth it in the end, hoping that the McCanns could one day be reunited with Madeleine.

"I'm going to continue hoping. That's what that service was about, saying we are hoping that she will show up," he told Daily Star Online.

"Nobody's given an answer, or a reason why that might not happen. We will keep hoping until that definitive answer is there, until there's no reason to hope anymore."

Father Hubbard made his remarks after a moving ceremony in Praia da Luz where a special message from Madeleine's mother, Kate, was read out.

It said: "10 years without Madeleine — If that thought had even entered my head back in May 2007, I wouldn't have lasted another day.

"And now, a decade on, it's still inconceivable. How can it be our little girl — who brought us the gift of parenthood?"

It comes as Daily Star Online revealed sick Maddie merchandise is available online.

Kate also said the family continue to miss Madeleine "every second" and paid tribute to their supporters in Praia da Luz.

« Last Edit: May 06, 2017, 05:42:12 PM by Brietta »
What's up, old man?

Offline pathfinder73

Smithman carrying a child in his arms checked his watch after passing the Smith family and the time was 10:03. Both are still unidentified 10 years later.

Offline Brietta

ON THE MADDIE TRAIL: Brit behind McCann tour tells all – what REALLY happened that night?
IT'S a town desperate to forget the disappearance of Madeleine McCann, but for one Brit in Praia da Luz it's just a case to be cracked.


By Michael Havis / Published 6th May 2017

That man, who asked not to be named, is the one behind the infamous Maddie tours in the Portuguese town where she vanished.

Daily Star Online met the person behind the headlines and joined him for a tour of a place largely unchanged since 2007.

But first things first — this is not a business; our guide doesn't charge a penny and only does one-on-one tours.


MYSTERY TOWN: Daily Star Online was shown round Praia da Luz by a 'Maddie' tour guide

And he's got no time for daft theories about Maddie's fate; if he thinks a suggestion is rubbish, he'll tell you.

The first major stop we call at is a hill dug up by British police as part of Operation Grange in 2014.

It seems a discrete place to hide a body, but our guide is clear — this town-centre scrubland is busier than it looks.

"This is a main road, that's a minor road, and you've got businesses round here," he said. "It looks like it's quiet, but it's not.

"The problem with Operation Grange is they never really visited this on foot, apart from the dig. They never involved local knowledge at all."

From there, it's just a short walk to the Rua de Escola Primera — location of the most notorious Maddie sighting.

Here, at approximately 10pm — the time her parents discovered she had gone, a man was spotted with a child in his arms.


UNIDENTIFIED: The man sighted with a child that night, inset, walked down this street

A digital likeness of that man was released on Crimewatch in 2013 and identifying him soon became instrumental to the police's efforts.

Our guide says: "I think he was just an innocent Portuguese man taking his child home and that his house was probably somewhere around here."

Just 500 yards away is the final stop on the tour, the infamous apartment 5A Maddie vanished from and the surrounding Ocean Club resort.

What happened here that fateful night, nobody knows for sure, but our guide – a retired Brit living in the town – has a theory.

"I can't prove it happened this way, but there was a lot to suggest it was a pre-planned abduction," the man said.

Whatever the case, he seems to believe that showing those interested in the case round the town can help solve the mystery
http://www.dailystar.co.uk/news/latest-news/611674/madeleine-mccann-tour-praia-da-luz-maddie-portugal-missing
"All I'm going to say is that we've conducted a very serious investigation and there's no indication that Madeleine McCann's parents are connected to her disappearance. On the other hand, we have a lot of evidence pointing out that Christian killed her," Wolter told the "Friday at 9"....


Offline pathfinder73

10th Anniversary video in PDL.
Smithman carrying a child in his arms checked his watch after passing the Smith family and the time was 10:03. Both are still unidentified 10 years later.

Alfie

  • Guest
10th Anniversary video in PDL.
No commentary, very boring, full of very ugly people - is it a Sonia Poulton production?

Online Eleanor

No commentary, very boring, full of very ugly people - is it a Sonia Poulton production?

Ah.  Rumour has it that she's been there.  Is it as bad as that?

Alfie

  • Guest
Ah.  Rumour has it that she's been there.  Is it as bad as that?
LOL, no I think this youtube video is just some random footage put together for news outlets to take clips from for their own news programmes.  It's just a bit "meh" really, not very illuminating and not a press article about Madeleine's disappearance.  Expect the last few posts to be deleted shortly....

Online Eleanor

LOL, no I think this youtube video is just some random footage put together for news outlets to take clips from for their own news programmes.  It's just a bit "meh" really, not very illuminating and not a press article about Madeleine's disappearance.  Expect the last few posts to be deleted shortly....

Whoops.  Must get on to that.  After I've had my tea.

Offline ShiningInLuz

Be careful of that which you delete.

There several snippets of high quality information in there.

 8((()*/
What's up, old man?

Online Eleanor

Be careful of that which you delete.

There several snippets of high quality information in there.

 8((()*/

You know me.  I never delete anything.  Just kidding.