Now let's see. It didn't start with the current PM, did it?
People criticised Blair's support, then Gordon Brown's.
There were screeches of left-wing mutual back-scratching and a call for a right-wing government to end the perceived "coverup".
Cameron comes to power and supports a review.
There may have been PR brownie points in it for all of them, but at the end of the day a vulnerable British subject is missing, whereabouts unknown.
Supporting international cooperation and being seen to do so would appear to transcend mainstream party politics.
Two very important issues there, Carana, it seems that Madeleine McCann is considered more a football to be kicked around in support of debating points than the fact she is a vulnerable British subject who has gone missing abroad.
Truly remarkable that those who pay lip service to "justice" for her seem to be the most vociferously opposed to any effort to find her.
The cooperation between the PJ and SY can only be of benefit ... in the first instance to Madeleine McCann's case ... but also in any future case which requires working with officers from a foreign jurisdiction with differing cultural imperatives.
I think both forces will have worked at their differences and I think it is something which will continue to be exploited in all sorts of cases with a common interest for both countries.
Although Madeleine McCann is at the heart of the present case ... I think there is also a huge spin off from it which will encourage international crime to beware. It is worth remembering the British children who were assaulted with apparent impunity, perhaps those crimes will be properly addressed also.
Why should anyone who objects to the cost of Operation Grange ... wish to have an expensive public inquiry at this stage in proceedings? Cui bono?
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Snipped ...
JAMES MURRAY 00:01, Sun, May 10, 2015It is my firm belief that Home Secretary Theresa May should resist those demands because it seems the truth is finally beginning to emerge.
Grange officers have at last established a proper, professional working relationship with their Portuguese counterparts which is producing results. Certain people have been identified and interviewed.
Their alibis and their reactions are being scrutinised as never before. Some have been cleared of any involvement but probes into others continue. One of the greatest achievements of the Grange team has been detailed analysis of phone records, showing roughly who was active on networks at key times on the evening of May 3, 2007, in the Algarve resort.
Portuguese officers, guided by Grange detectives, are now in a position to ask people what they were doing in Praia da Luz during that evening and why did they call or text so and so?
Layers and layers of wrong leads and useless information have now been peeled away, allowing officers to concentrate on the core facts.
http://www.express.co.uk/comment/expresscomment/576139/EXPRESS-COMMENT-We-must-never-give-up-on-Maddy