Maddy dad's agony


Maddy dad's agony
The Sunday Mirror
26 August 2007
Lara Gould and Lori Campbell
His pain at coming home


Gerry McCann yesterday told of his heartbreak at having to return home.

Missing Madeleine's father, 39, is to go back to work as a hospital heart specialist in Leicester.

He says he and wife Kate, 38, have to balance their desperate wish to find Madeleine, four, with the needs of their two-year-old twins Sean and Amelie. He added: "The difficulty we have is emotionally leaving Portugal as a family of four when we came as a family of five."

Madeleine was snatched from her bed in the resort of Praia da Luz on the Algarve 115 days ago. Speaking at the Edinburgh International Television Festival, Gerry stressed he still believes she is alive, but said the campaign to find his daughter would now be scaled down.

Meanwhile, the McCanns faced more wild accusations in Portuguese papers - with one claiming sniffer dogs had detected the scent of a corpse in their hire car. But a family pal raged: "It's rubbish."
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'We're coming home'


'We're coming home'
Exclusive: Hard-up McCanns plan sad return to UK.. but search for Maddy goes on 

The Sunday Mirror
19 August 2007
Lori Campbell in Praia da Luz


Madeleine McCann's parents are preparing to make the heart-wrenching move back to Britain next month.

Kate and Gerry, who are on unpaid leave from their NHS jobs, are finding the financial burden of staying on in Portugal too much to bear. And they desperately want their two-year-old twins to regain some form of stability and routine in England.

A close family friend told the Sunday Mirror: "The lease on their villa runs out in mid- September and they're coming close to setting a date to return home."

Although they are feeling the financial strain the McCanns have refused to dip into the £1million Find Madeleine Fund set up to help pay their living expenses while they hunt for their daughter.

They have instead emptied their own life savings to pay for their stay in Portugal and the mortgage and bills on their home in Rothley, Leicestershire.

Only £67,000 of the Find Madeleine Fund has been spent - the McCanns claim expenses only for flights and accommodation on campaign-related trips and for stationery to make posters.

And 108 days after Madeleine was kidnapped from their holiday apartment, the McCanns are now finding the costs of living in Portugal too much.

Gerry is on unpaid leave from his NHS job as heart consultant at Glenfield Hospital in Leicester and Kate, a locum GP, is also not earning a salary.

The couple are now making preparations to return home when the £1,200-a-month rent on their three-bed villa in Praia da Luz runs out next month.

Their campaign manager Justine McGuiness is due to step down at the same time.

But the most pressing reason for the McCanns to return home is their two-year-old twins Sean and Amelie. They have always tried to maintain a stable routine for them in Portugal, taking them to the daily creche, Kids' Club and playing with them in the afternoons.

But they feel they now need to return them to the UK.

A close friend of the couple said yesterday: "They have to make sure the twins are protected. That means giving them a stable home life and routine and they can only do that in the UK.

"At home there is a strong support network - with lots of friends and family around to help. They know their home is in Leicestershire."

But Kate has confided in close friends that she cannot face going back to work and wants to become closely involved with charities for missing children.

Their friend said: "She just can't imagine going back to work. She insists that returning to the UK does not mean they are giving up on Madeleine and she wants to work full-time on the campaign.

"She has learnt a lot about missing and exploited children and would like to devote some of her time to working with charities."

Gerry has always argued that it would be easier to run their Find Madeleine campaign from the UK but Kate, 38, has stood firm, saying she feels emotionally close to Madeleine in Portugal.

On Friday the couple broke the news to their two-year-old twins Sean and Amelie that their daughter is missing and their mum and dad are "looking for her."

They have still not decided whether to go back to their family home, or sell it because it holds too many memories of Madeleine.

The McCanns' decision to return home comes after Portuguese police chief Alipio Ribeiro said they are working on the "strong hypothesis" she is dead. But he said: "It would be frivolous of me to say we're near the end."

Unconfirmed reports in Portugese newspapers yesterday claimed police are moving in on a new "concrete suspect".

It is claimed "biological traces" were found in a hire car belonging to a man staying at the resort.
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Maddie parents coming home for twins


Maddie parents coming home for twins
Code Madeleine Campaign
Ross Hall in Praia da Luz
19 August 2007
The News of the World


MUM LEFT IN TORMENT

MISSING tot Madeleine McCann's anguished parents are finally about to make the heartbreaking move home.

With still no clues to the four-year-old's disappearance 108 days ago, Kate and Gerry McCann have decided to return to Britain-for the sake of their two-year old twins.

For more than three months they have stayed in Praia da Luz, the resort where Maddie was snatched from their holiday apartment, driving on the desperate hunt for her.

Dad Gerry has always said it would be easier to run things from the UK. But distraught mum Kate stood firm, saying she felt close to her lost daughter in Portugal. Now friends say the couple are making arrangements to tear themselves away-and return home to Rothley, Leicestershire, next month.

The family are renting a villa close to where Madeleine was taken. But its lease runs out in mid-September.

They have been reluctant to use any of the Pounds 1 million donated to the Find Madeleine fund and have had to use their savings to pay rent and mortgage.

Shattered Kate, 39, has told close pals she fears she will never be able to return to her work as a GP.

And with Gerry on unpaid leave from his post as a heart consultant, they are finding it hard to cope financially. A family friend said last night: "Gerry and Kate are coming to terms with the fact they can't keep twins Sean and Amelie here for ever. It seems like the right time to go.

"They are slowly realising going home doesn't mean they're giving up on Maddie."

Earlier this week Kate said: "We know we'll be going back and I guess one day we'll wake up and it will be right. We never thought we'd go before Madeleine came back."The family's decision comes after Portuguese police admitted they have no idea what happened on the night Maddie disappeared.

Meanwhile, Code Madeleine, our ground-breaking initiative to find children abducted on holiday, continues to win worldwide approval.

The six-point plan ensures rapid action in the vital first hours after a child disappears. It is backed by British travel industry chiefs-and now top timeshare firms have adopted it, too.

FOR more details on Code Madeleine and our Pounds 1.5m reward offer go to notw.co.uk
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UK government agency to monitor blogs


15 August 2007
Financial Times
Carlos Grande


The COI, the UK government's communications agency, is working on a way to monitor what people say about policy on blogs and internet forums for the media briefings it sends to ministers. A project by the COI's Media Monitoring Unit is considering how to add blogs to its regular summaries of government coverage in mainstream press or television.
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Madeleine's angry parents tell police: We want answers


Madeleine's angry parents tell police: We want answers
15 August 2007
Daily Express
David Pilditch in Praia da Luz


Kate and Gerry McCann have demanded showdown talks with detectives leading the hunt for their daughter Madeleine.

The distraught couple are angry at the lack of information about how the investigation is progressing.

Their plea comes as senior detectives follow up fresh leads uncovered during a major review of the case by British officers.

Police are said to be moving away from the theory that Madeleine was abducted from the family's holiday apartment in Praia da Luz on May 3 – 104 days ago.

It has been reported that detectives now believe the foury ear-old was killed inside the flat – either by accident or murder.

Portuguese police are this week awaiting the results of DNA tests carried out in Britain on specks of blood found inside the McCanns' apartment.

The traces were discovered on a wall in Madeleine's bedroom and on curtains in her parents' room.

But the McCanns fear police will withhold the findings from them and hide behind Portugal's strict secrecy laws. Legislation prevents police discussing details about the ongoing criminal investigation.

A source close to the family said last night: "Since the discovery of the blood the attitude of the police has changed.

"As Madeleine's parents, they have a right to know if that blood is their daughter's or if it belongs to somebody else.

"They were already in an emotional turmoil. That is now being added to by the fear that information about Madeleine is being held back from them.

"They have had enough of all this speculation and rumour.

"They want to speak to detectives as soon as possible to try and establish fact from fiction.

"Like all of us they want to see the investigation moving forward and at the moment that doesn't seem to be the case." Representatives of the couple contacted police on Monday asking for a meeting with senior police officers. But they were told it would not take place until the DNA results were known.

The entire case has now been put on hold while scientists in Birmingham continue their tests.

Consultant cardiologist Gerry and his GP wife, both 39, have been assured they are not suspects but the couple are alarmed at the police's changing attitude towards them.

In his internet blog Gerry wrote yesterday: "We are still optimistic that there will be a breakthrough. In the meantime, however, little has changed for Kate and I.

"We will not give up hope until Madeleine is found and we will not stop searching for her." Kate was reduced to tears last week after the pair had separate meetings with detectives which were said to be more formal than previous briefings.

The McCanns faced fresh torment at the weekend when police stated for the first time publicly that they believed Madeleine was dead.

Chief Inspector Olegario Sousa said in a TV interview: "In the past few days there have been some developments and clues have been found that could point to the possible death of the little child.

"We are waiting for lab results of the evidence collected. All lines of inquiry are open – but these lines are a little bit more interesting." Mr McCann said of the statement: "If the current police activity does uncover new evidence that Madeleine has been seriously harmed, we should be the first to know." The McCanns are desperately clinging on to the hope that Madeleine will be returned safely.

They insist senior detectives have always told them they were searching for a "living child".

But while the family have been kept in the dark, leaks to Portuguese newspapers have fuelled a hateful smear campaign against them.
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Maddie cops: We're looking for body


Maddie cops: We're looking for body
Code Madeline; Exclusive New clues on 100th day of search
Ross Hall in Praia da Luz
12 August 2007
The News of the World


Cuddle Cat was moved
'Running man' spotted
Tot alive when snatched


Police hunting for Madeleine McCann last night admitted she could be dead as the News of the World uncovered a vital new clue that proves a kidnapper WAS in her room.  A hundred days after the four-year-old's disappearance a detective leading the investigation claimed there was now an "intensity" to the possibility that she had been killed.

Chief Inspector Olegario Sousa admitted new searches using British sniffer dogs could point to Madeleine's death. But we can reveal that:

Cuddle cat-the toy Maddie's mum Kate carried yesterday to a church service on the 100-day anniversary of her daughter's disappearance-is a key clue in the hunt.

There was NO "missing hour" in which Madeleine went unchecked as she slept with her twin brother and sister while Kate and dad Gerry ate with friends at a nearby restaurant.

Maddie was NOT killed in the room-despite the presence of blood specks on the walls now being tested.

High

A source close to the investigation last night told us Maddie's toy cat was found HIGH UP in the bedroom-well out of reach of the youngster who went to sleep cuddling it.

Police believe the kidnapper put it there because it would have been used to help identify Madeleine when appeals to find her were launched.

Our source said:

"A lot of people have always asked how Kate was so sure so quickly Madeleine had been snatched.

"It's because when she put her down to sleep her favourite toy was tucked up with her. When Kate found Madeleine missing the next thing she noticed was Cuddle Cat had been put high up out of the way-obviously by an adult."

Unreleased evidence also proves Madeleine was checked REGULARLY during the crucial hour between 9pm and 10pm-and that she was taken in a 'kidnap window' of under 10 minutes when a "RUNNING MAN" was spotted dashing from the apartment.

Dad Gerry checked on the children at 9pm and passed pal Jane Tanner-on her way to check her own children-as he returned to the restaurant. She returned before 9.25pm after seeing a man running with a child. Ten minutes later a male pal at dinner walked up to the McCanns apartment and listened at the door. Believing the children were asleep he returned to the table. It was only 20 minutes before Kate found Maddie gone.

Our source said:

"When we're talking less than 10 minutes to grab a child, without leaving evidence, it is not just chance their parents were out. It proves whoever took her had watched the family for days."

A family friend said Jane Tanner (pictured left) was "devastated" she could have witnessed the abduction and did not stop it. It also emerged police do not think the blood found is Maddie's- because the pattern does not indicate a struggle. Our source said: "Police have concrete evidence she was alive when she was taken."

Yesterday the McCanns-whose continued presence in Portugal was criticised by some locals- were close to tears as they prayed at the anniversary service in a packed church at Praia da Luz.

Kate asked people to support their "journey of hope" for Maddie.
  
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Alive when taken. Kidnapper put cuddle cat on ledge then picked her up.


Alive when taken
Exclusive Madeleine: 100 Days of Hell
Kidnapper put cuddle cat on ledge then picked her up.
The blood spots in apartment are not hers say cops
The Sunday Mirror
12 August 2007
Lori Campbell in Praia da Luz


Missing Madeleine McCann's favourite pink Cuddle Cat toy was taken from her arms as she slept and placed beyond her reach by her kidnapper. That is why police are certain Madeleine was snatched while she was asleep - and was NOT killed or injured in the holiday apartment.

When her mum Kate, 38, tucked Madeleine into bed, the four-year-old was cuddling the toy - but it was later found placed on a ledge that Madeleine could not have reached.

There is also further "concrete evidence" that Madeleine was still ALIVE when she left the holiday apartment. Her kidnapper had a window of just five minutes to strike - from when dad Gerry last checked on the children until family friend Jane Tanner saw a man carrying away a child she is sure was Madeleine wrapped in a blanket. The new revelations rubbish reports in Portuguese newspapers yesterday that she was murdered or died in an accident inside the villa.

However, local police Chief Inspector Olegario Sousa admitted for the first time that Madeleine could be dead. He said:

"In the past few days there have been some developments and some clues that have been found that could point to the possible death of the little child. But until this moment we are waiting for lab results of the evidence collected and all lines of inquiry are open."

Now, the Sunday Mirror can give a true picture of what happened when Kate found her daughter missing. We can reveal:

Police have specific evidence from the apartment that she was still alive

Madeleine was kidnapped as the toy she had fallen asleep with was left on a ledge placed too high for a child to reach

There was a window of less than five minutes for a kidnapper to pounce - not enough time to kill her and clean up

Police do not believe blood found in the apartment was Madeleine's as it was not consistent with signs of a struggle

The patio doors were unlocked but the intruder used the window to escape with Madeleine as the shutters were forced up.

We can also reveal that devastated Kate was reduced to tears several times by the aggressive questioning of Portuguese police this week. And yesterday the parents were hit by further cruel claims in Portuguese papers linking them to Madeleine's disappearance on May 3.

But our dramatic information confirms Madeleine was most likely to have been abducted by a stranger who had watched the family's routine for up to four days. And it shows Portuguese police from the beginning have had firm evidence Madeleine was still alive when she was taken from the ground-floor apartment.

The McCanns were told in a secret meeting with police within days of Madeleine going missing what this evidence is.

They have been unable to discuss it publicly in case it jeopardises the investigation - and have even been banned from telling close friends or family.

Kate has refused to say where she found the Cuddle Cat toy when she returned to the villa in Praia da Luz at about 10pm to find her daughter's bed empty.

But she has hinted the bedroom was left in such a way that she knew almost instantly Madeleine had been kidnapped.

Our police source said:

"When Kate tucked Madeleine up in bed earlier in the evening, she had the toy tightly in her arms as she did every night. So Kate was terrified when she spotted it had been left in a place too high for her to reach. Kate also noticed the window was wide open and the shutters jammed up. It was because of these things that she had no doubt Madeleine had been kidnapped and she ran out to scream for help."

The Sunday Mirror has been told there was a window of opportunity of less than five minutes from the last time Gerry checked on their child to the reported sighting by family friend Jane of her being carried away by a man.

Our source said: "Although there has been much speculation about a 'lost hour' in which Madeleine could have been taken, it was actually less than five minutes. The kidnapping must have been meticulously planned. Police found no fingerprints or DNA on the Cuddle Cat or in the room, indicating the intruder wore gloves.

There was so little time that whoever took Madeleine must have been watching the family closely for several days so they knew exactly when to strike.

"Kate and Gerry left Madeleine and the twins Sean and Amelie alone every evening of their week-long holiday to eat dinner 50 yards away and followed the same routine of checking on them. The kidnapper would have known this."

The patio doors at the back of the apartment were left unlocked so Kate and Gerry could check on the children easily. But police are unsure if the intruder used them to slip in or if the shutters to the window were forced open from outside.

Sniffer dogs flown over to Portugal last week by British police were taken into the apartment and found specks of blood missed in an initial search.

The results of DNA tests are expected this week but detectives are convinced it does not belong to Madeleine because if it was fresh, it would have been spotted when they first scoured the apartment.

But that has not stopped the Portuguese media leading a hurtful smear campaign against Kate and Gerry which reached a new low with the suggestion Madeleine was killed inside the apartment and that Kate was somehow involved.

The spiteful rumours forced Kate and Gerry to insist they would not be bullied out of Portugal. But yesterday there were more cruel accusations as they marked 100 days since Madeleine disappeared.

Portuguese newspaper Sol alleged the toddler died in the apartment before her parents went to dinner. It says British sniffer dogs picked up traces of her corpse and signs she was moved. An "unnamed specialist" told the newspaper:

"For the dogs to detect a body, it would have to stay in place where it died for a minimum of two hours."

The report also alleged the McCanns' silver Renault Scenic hire car may have been used to get rid of Madeleine's body. A McCann spokesman yesterday dismissed the allegations as "complete nonsense".

   
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PJ forced to investigate abduction track


PJ forced to investigate abduction trackAugust 12, 2007
José Carlos Marques

Alipio Ribeiro, national director of the Judicial Police received a telephone call from John Buck, the British ambassador in Portugal, on the night Madeleine disappeared from the Ocean Club, May 3.

GOOGLE TRANSLATION:

At about 23:00, about two hours after he was involved the child's disappearance, Alipio Ribeiro had to stop a private dinner to hear the diplomat. The phone call was the first sign that the British were very interested to follow closely the action of the PJ and push towards the abduction investigations.

"The PJ has lost too much time investigating the abduction," said a source close to the CM research. The pressure of British diplomacy will only be slowed when they arrived in Portugal British police officers who supported the redirection of research for the hypothesis of murder. The biological evidence found in the apartment were decisive to change the course of the investigation, or at least for the PJ to admit publicly that change.

The decision to deepen the hypothesis of the death of the child at the Ocean Club - and the consequent re-evaluation of the testimony of Maddie's parents and friends of the couple - was taken into account the views of the British police.

The interview Olegario Sousa - the chief inspector of the Judiciary which has served as a spokesman for police in this case - given yesterday to the BBC and ITN television was agreed with these agents.

The choice of these two television channels was motivated by outrage that the British police themselves felt in the Algarve on the objections that have been made by the British press to the PJ. The BBC and ITN have treated the case with more coolness and impartiality, reason for their privileged access to the interview.

Olegario Sousa admitted for the first time in public the possibility of Madeleine being dead. A position that leaves the McCanns in the center of investigations, a situation that has been managed 'with tweezers' by Portuguese police.

The couple has relied on the help of powerful friends. The former spokesman for the McCanns, Clarence Mitchell, who organized the trips of Maddie's parents to several European countries, is currently adviser to Gordon Brown, the current British prime minister.

Brown supported the cause of Maddie from the beginning, because that is not alien Jill Renwick, a friend of the couple's longtime neighbor John Brown, brother of the British prime minister. According to The Guardian, Jill approached John on the street, and this he brought the message to the brother.

SUPPORT

Father Haynes Hubbard, who celebrated his homily yesterday in Praia da Luz, has expressed its support for the McCanns in the decision to stay in Portugal: "If it were my daughter, I would not leave here." Hubbard stressed that the ceremony served to make Kate and Gerry feel that "we are with them in their grief."

"WE WILL NOT GIVE UP"

"We will not give up looking," he said Gerry, voice breaking, during the homily held yesterday morning in the church of Praia da Luz, which marked the hundred days after Madeleine's disappearance. The girl's parents could not hide the emotion in the religious ceremony celebrated in English and chaired by Anglican priest Haynes Hubbard.
Kate and Gerry intervened twice each, confessing that they are living the "darkest days" of their lives, but have faith in the return of her daughter. At the end were applauded by dozens of people. Inside and outside the church.

SPOKESMAN ADMITS THE JUDICIAL DEATH OF CHILD

The spokesman for the Judicial Police in the investigation into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann has admitted in an interview on BBC public television, the possibility that the girl was dead. Chief Inspector Olegario Sousa also ensured that the child's parents are not suspects, are victims and witnesses.

Source close to the McCann family said that "after a tough week, it was nice" Gerry and Kate hear from official sources that are not suspects. But the couple said nothing about whether her daughter was dead. The parents said in recent days, the police presented no evidence to that effect them. "Portuguese law does not allow to put everything on the table, even for the people involved," cautioned the inspector told the BBC.

The spokesman says PJ "developments occurred in the last days and found some clues that may point to the possible death of the child." It adds that all lines are open and that laboratory tests are awaited. "But this line [the child's death] is now taking place with greater intensity," concluded the inspector.

BBC interview

"We have found clues that might point to the child's death" Olegario Sousa

"We are waiting for test results to the evidence gathered." Olegario Sousa

"All lines are open. But it is now taking place with greater intensity. "Olegario Sousa

"The couple is not suspected. They are victims because they lost their daughter, and they are witnesses in the case." Olegario Sousa

THE CASE SEEN IN ENGLAND

'DAILY MAIL'

This paper points out that when the parents of Maddie mark the hundred days of his disappearance, the chief inspector and spokesman PJ, Olegario Sousa, said in an interview to British television, admitted for the first time that Maddie may be dead.

SKY NEWS

In addition to statements of the chief inspector of the PJ, Sky News is a photographic montage about one hundred days of the girl's disappearance. In Glasgow, where is the natural father of Maddie, a song was played at the opening of the international festival of flute.

'THE TIMES'

Gerry, Maddie's father, said he had no doubt about the friends that were and are with him and Kate in Praia da Luz Gerry's statements follow on from the interrogation of him, his wife and friends were subjected by PJ stresses The Times.

'DAILY MIRROR'

"Show us the proof" is the title of this newspaper article, which states that the parents of Maddie asked the Judicial Police for them to reveal the evidence they have collected and that lead them to believe that the girl is dead. "Prove to us that she is dead."

NOTES

MOTHER ASKS PRAYERS

"Please keep Madeleine in your thoughts and prayers," urged the girl's mother. Kate prayed a Hail Mary and thanked the support of the community.

JUDICIAL AND JOURNALISTS

In his homily was only made a speech in Portuguese. Served to ask God to bless "the efforts and dedication" of the Judicial and "enlighten the media."

MADDIE REMEMBERED IN THE PREMIER LEAGUE

There were many players in the Premier League who used sweaters with little Maddie's face on the opening day of the race. George McCartney (West Ham) was one of them.


ORIGINAL PORTUGUESE:

PJ forçada a investigar pista de rapto
Alípio Ribeiro, director nacional da Polícia Judiciária, recebeu uma chamada telefónica de John Buck, embaixador britânico em Portugal, na noite em que Madeleine desapareceu do Ocean Club, a 3 de Maio.
12 Agosto 2007
José Carlos Marques / P.M.

Por volta das 23h00, cerca de duas horas depois de ter sido participado o desaparecimento da criança, Alípio Ribeiro teve de interromper um jantar privado para ouvir o diplomata. O telefonema foi o primeiro sinal de que os ingleses estavam muito interessados em acompanhar de perto a acção da PJ e a empurrar as investigações no sentido do rapto.

“A PJ perdeu demasiado tempo a investigar o rapto”, contou ao CM fonte ligada à investigação. A pressão da diplomacia inglesa só terá abrandado quando chegaram a Portugal agentes da polícia britânica que apoiaram o redireccionamento da investigação para a hipótese de homicídio. Os indícios biológicos encontrados no apartamento foram decisivos para mudar o rumo do inquérito, ou, pelo menos, para a PJ admitir publicamente essa mudança.
A decisão de aprofundar a hipótese da morte da criança no Ocean Club – e a consequente reavaliação dos depoimentos dos pais de Maddie e dos amigos do casal – foi tomada tendo em conta a opinião dos polícias ingleses. A entrevista que Olegário Sousa – o inspector-chefe da Judiciária que tem servido de porta-voz da polícia neste caso – concedeu ontem às televisões BBC e ITN foi concertada com estes agentes.

A escolha destes dois canais televisivos foi motivada pela indignação que os próprios polícias ingleses no Algarve sentiram em relação às acusações que têm sido feitas pela imprensa britânica à PJ. A BBC e a ITN têm tratado o caso com mais frieza e imparcialidade, razão pela qual foram privilegiados no acesso à entrevista.

Olegário Sousa admitiu pela primeira vez em público a hipótese de Madeleine estar morta. Uma posição que deixa os McCann no centro das investigações, situação que tem sido gerida ‘com pinças’ pela polícia portuguesa.
O casal tem contado com a ajuda de amigos poderosos. O primeiro porta-voz dos McCann, Clarence Mitchell, que organizou as viagens dos pais de Maddie a vários países europeus, é hoje assessor de Gordon Brown, o actual primeiro-ministro britânico.

Brown apoiou a causa de Maddie desde o início, facto a que não é alheio Jill Renwick, amiga do casal de há longa data, ser vizinha de Jonh Brown, irmão do primeiro-ministro britânico. Segundo o ‘The Guardian’, Jill abordou John na rua, e este fez chegar a mensagem ao irmão.
APOIO
O padre Haynes Hubbard, que celebrou ontem a homilia na Praia da Luz, manifestou o seu apoio ao casal McCann na decisão de permanecer em Portugal: “Se fosse minha filha, eu não sairia daqui”. Hubbard frisou que a cerimónia religiosa serviu para fazer sentir a Kate e a Gerry que “estamos com eles na sua dor”.

"NÃO IREMOS DESISTIR"

“Não iremos desistir de a procurar”, garantiu Gerry, de voz embargada, no decurso da homilia realizada ontem de manhã na igreja da Praia da Luz, que assinalou os cem dias sobre o desaparecimento de Madeleine. Os pais da menina não conseguiram esconder a emoção na cerimónia religiosa, celebrada em língua inglesa e presidida pelo padre anglicano Haynes Hubbard.

Kate e Gerry intervieram duas vezes cada um, confessando que estão a viver “os dias mais difíceis” das suas vidas, mas têm fé no regresso da filha. No final foram aplaudidos por dezenas de pessoas. Dentro e fora da igreja.

PORTA-VOZ DA JUDICIÁRIA ADMITE MORTE DA CRIANÇA

O porta-voz da Polícia Judiciária no inquérito ao desaparecimento de Madeleine McCann admitiu, em entrevista à televisão pública britânica BBC, a possibilidade de a menina estar morta. O inspector-chefe Olegário Sousa garantiu ainda que os pais da criança não são suspeitos; são vítimas e testemunhas.

Fonte próxima da família McCann disse que, “após uma semana difícil, foi simpático” Gerry e Kate ouvirem de fonte oficial que não são suspeitos. Mas o casal nada comenta sobre a possibilidade de a sua filha estar morta. Os pais disseram, nos últimos dias, que a polícia não lhes apresentou provas nesse sentido. “A lei portuguesa não permite colocar tudo em cima da mesa, mesmo para as pessoas envolvidas”, ressalvou o inspector à BBC.
O porta-voz da PJ diz que “nos últimos dias aconteceram desenvolvimentos e foram encontradas algumas pistas que podem apontar para a possível morte da criança”. Acrescenta que todas as linhas estão em aberto e que são aguardados testes laboratoriais. “Mas esta linha [morte da criança] está agora a verificar-se com maior intensidade”, conclui o inspector.

ENTREVISTA À BBC

"Foram encontradas pistas que podem apontar para a morte da criança” Olegário Sousa

“Estamos à espera de resultados de análises às provas recolhidas.” Olegário Sousa

“Todas as linhas estão em aberto. Mas está agora a verificar-se com maior intensidade.” Olegário Sousa

"O casal não é suspeito. São vítimas, porque perderam a filha, e são testemunhas no caso.” Olegário Sousa

O CASO VISTO EM INGLATERRA

'DAILY MAIL'

Este jornal destaca que, quando os pais de Maddie assinalam os cem dias do seu desaparecimento, o inspector-chefe e porta-voz da PJ, Olegário Sousa, em entrevista às televisões britânicas, admite, pela primeira vez, que Maddie possa estar morta.

SKY NEWS

Além das declarações do inspector-chefe da PJ, a Sky News faz uma montagem fotográfica acerca dos cem dias do desaparecimento da menina. Em Glasgow, de onde é natural o pai de Maddie, foi tocada uma música na abertura do festival internacional de flauta.

'THE TIMES'

Gerry, pai de Maddie, afirma não ter dúvidas sobre os amigos que estiveram e estão com ele e Kate na Praia da Luz. As declarações de Gerry surgem na sequência do interrogatório a que ele, a mulher e os amigos foram sujeitos pela PJ, sublinha o ‘Times’.

'DAILY MIRROR'

“Mostrem-nos a prova” é o título do artigo deste jornal, que refere que os pais de Maddie pediram à Polícia Judiciária para lhes que revelarem as provas que recolheram e que os levam a crer que a menina esteja morta. “Provem-nos que ela está morta.”

NOTAS
MÃE PEDE ORAÇÕES
“Por favor, mantenham Madeleine nos vossos pensamentos e orações”, pediu a mãe da menina. Kate rezou uma ave-maria e agradeceu o apoio da comunidade.
JUDICIÁRIA E JORNALISTAS
Na homilia foi apenas feita uma intervenção em português. Serviu para pedir que Deus abençoe “o esforço e a dedicação” da Judiciária e “ilumine os mass media”.
MADDIE LEMBRADA NA PREMIER LEAGUE
Foram muitos os jogadores da Premier League que utilizaram camisolas com o rosto da pequena Maddie na jornada inaugural da prova. George McCartney (West Ham) foi um deles.
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Kate's plea: Please stay with us now


Kate's plea: Please stay with us now
Madeleine: 100 Days of Hell
The Sunday Mirror
12 August 2007
Lori Campbell


Kate and Gerry McCann yesterday attended a poignant service of prayers for Madeleine to mark 100 days since she went missing.

The couple, who arrived holding hands for the somber service at the tiny church in Praia da Luz, both wore the Portuguese colours of hope - yellow and green - and "Look for Madeleine" wristbands.

Scores of wellwishers gathered at the whitewashed Nossa Senhora da Luz church as the McCanns closed one of the most difficult weeks since Madeleine went missing.

Some locals stirred up by Portuguese press reports have begun to criticise their constant presence in the resort and a car parked opposite the church had a message in the window saying "Circus go home".

During the hour-long service, Kate thanked local people for their support and asked them to stay with her and her husband as they continued their "journey of hope" for their "precious" daughter.

The service - themed as "100 Days of Hope" - included prayers for Madeleine and other missing children as well as short addresses by both the McCanns.

Her voice breaking with emotion and still clutching Madeleine's favourite Cuddle Cat toy, Kate McCann said: "I would like to welcome you all here today to join us in some special prayers for Madeleine and all children who suffer around the world at this moment.

"As you are aware, it is 100 days now since our little girl was taken from us. Every day feels so hard without Madeleine. I could talk all day about how wonderful, how precious Madeleine is, but suffice to say we all miss her so much and our lives aren't complete without Madeleine.

"Please stay with us as we continue our journey of hope and please keep Madeleine in your thoughts and prayers."

Her husband struggled to hold back tears as he thanked the local community for its "overwhelming support". He said: "We have not given up hope that we will be reunited with her. We will not stop looking for her until she is found." Many families with youngsters attended the service, which was drawn up with children in mind and included the hymn Away In A Manger. Members of the congregation lit candles and placed them on the altar.

In the McCanns' hometown of Rothley, Leicestershire, relatives and friends marked yesterday's grim milestone with a quiet vigil at the local Catholic church.

Meanwhile, Madeleine's grandmother Eileen McCann said rumours of her daughter's involvement in her disappearance were "obscene".

She said anyone who knew the couple would be horrified. "The idea of Kate or Gerry being involved is ridiculous," she said. "They love those children more than they love themselves."

Stars from the worlds of rugby, football and horse racing yesterday urged people at major sporting events around the UK to continue looking for Madeleine. In one of many shows of solidarity, Robbie Keane led out the entire Spurs team wearing Madeleine t-shirts for their game at Sunderland. And at Twickenham a video was shown at half-time of Jonny Wilkinson and other England stars giving their support to the hunt for Madeleine.

'We won't stop looking until Madeleine is found'
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Grieving mother of lost daughter prays 'every day' for Madeleine


11 August 2007
Irish Independent


The grieving mother of a child who disappeared without trace 30 years ago has revealed that she prays every day that Madeleine McCann, who vanished from a holiday apartment in Portugal exactly 100 days ago, will be found alive and safe.

Ann Boyle, whose daughter Mary went missing in 1977, knows more than most what English couple Kate and Gerry McCann are going through. But she said they must soon face the heartwrenching choice that she and her husband had to make all those years ago.
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