Thanks for not giving up on us


Thanks for not giving up on us
Maddie one year on: Parent's praise our readers
Ross Hall
4 May 2008
The News of the World


Your support keeps us going

THE desperate parents of Madeleine McCann fear the first anniversary of her disappearance offers their last chance of finding her.

Kate and Gerry, both 40, are worried that now the date has passed, Maddie's plight will be forgotten.

Speaking exclusively to the News of the World as they re-launch their campaign to find her, Gerry told us: "This could be the last chance to get our message out there.

"We ask anyone with information to come forward. We're not interested in who you are, we just want to find our daughter."

The McCanns thanked the News of the World and our readers for supporting their efforts to find Maddie, who went missing aged three from the family's holiday apartment in Portuguese resort Praia da Luz.

We offered a Pounds 1.5million reward -the largest in newspaper history- and launched a massive poster campaign across Portugal and Europe.

Darkest

Gerry said: "We can wholeheartedly say a huge thank-you to the News of the World and your readers for their constant and unswerving support of us.

"Even in the darkest days, that commitment didn't waver and having somebody who was prepared to believe in us when almost everyone else had doubts has really helped give us strength.

"To have the News of the World behind us and not adding to that agony has been very important to us. The reward, posters and constant support have all helped.

"Putting flyers on to all of the planes showing Madeleine's photograph was the right message and was exactly what needed to be done at the time."

Kate added: "We are very grateful for everything you have done for us. The News of the World has shown responsible journalism towards a family who are going through an awful ordeal.

"The News of the World has always taken a very strong stance about crimes against children and I think that's admirable."

The couple spoke to us before a special service at their local church-St Mary and St John in Rothley, Leics-yesterday to mark the first anniversary to the day of Maddie's disappearance.

At the service a sobbing Kate spontaneously left her pew to address the packed church.

Standing at the pulpit, she pleaded: "Pray like mad.

"Please stay with us, stay with Madeleine, keep praying."

Earlier, Kate told us she has finally accepted the harsh truth that Madeleine has gone.

She told us: "I think it has become reality now. For an incredibly long time it was very surreal.

"I do have moments where I actually think back to what's happened. What we've gone through and done over the last year.

"Sometimes I visualise somebody going into the bedroom and taking Madeleine. I don't know how somebody could do that. But we're a year down the line and the reality of Madeleine not being here has finally hit home."

Gerry, caringly placing an arm around Kate's shoulder, said: "There are periods where you think, 'Has this really happened?'

"Every day is the same for us in respect of how hard it is without Madeleine. If we hadn't had something positive to focus our energy on this week it would have been quite unbearable."

In a bid to find some hope in their torment, the McCanns are backing a Europe wide abduction alert system.

They want it based on America's Amber Alert scheme-where police immediately inform border patrols, the media and the public about a missing child. But for now they are channelling all their energy into finding Madeleine.

Gerry said: "Since Wednesday we've been flat out with work on the re-launch of the campaign.

Response

"We do think a child alert system is needed but our primary objective is the search for Madeleine. Everything else is secondary."

Their investigative team has been inundated with "hundreds" of new calls and potential leads.

Gerry revealed: "We have had an overwhelming response and we are very encouraged by it.

"We want people to keep coming forward with information."

The couple have tried to keep a normal family life for the sake of their twins Sean and Amelie.

Consultant cardiologist Gerry has returned to work full time though Kate, a GP, has not.

The couple still get stopped in the street by well-wishers which, Kate says, always gives her a lift.

They made a conscious decision to mark the anniversary of Maddie's disappearance in Rothley, not Praia da Luz. Gerry explained: "Our experience of Portugal is tainted. We would have liked to have left there under very different circumstances."

THE BBC last night pulled a film scheduled for today called Madeline-about a runaway orphan and a kidnapping plot-after the News of the World pointed out the insensitive nature of its timing.

Pounds 1.5m reward for Maddie's safe return - details at notw.co.uk
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The McCanns Versus the Media


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You keep asking yourself: 'Why did they think it was all right to leave the children?'


29 April 2008
Liverpool Echo
Paddy Shennan


EXCLUSIVE In the concluding part of his series marking the first anniversary of Madeleine McCann's disappearance, chief feature writer Paddy Shennan hears how her grandmother is still struggling to come to terms with the decision taken by nine people on that fateful night.
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McCanns: Our tell-all book


McCanns: Our tell-all book
Exclusive Maddie 1 year on they hit back at slurs
The Sunday Mirror
27 April 2008
Lori Campbell


Anguished Kate and Gerry McCann are to write a book about their year of hell since little Madeleine disappeared.

The couple are desperate to tell the truth of their ordeal and plan to publish a tell-all book with the help of a ghost-writer - with all proceeds going to the Find Madeleine Fund.

They have had "countless" approaches by publishers and writers who want to help put their story into words and answer all the unfounded allegations they have faced.

Next Saturday is the first anniversary of the day four-year-old Madeleine was snatched from the family's holiday apartment in Praia da Luz, Portugal.

As they prepare to mark the agonising milestone their official spokesman Clarence Mitchell said: "It will be the family's story, the only official book. Kate and Gerry are both keen to put the truth of everything that has happened to them on record.

"It will be a detailed account of their experience, from the pain of the night Madeleine was kidnapped, to being named as official suspects in the investigation."

Kate and Gerry have been gagged by Portuguese secrecy laws which ban them from speaking out while they are still "arguidos" (official suspects). They have been forced to stay silent while detectives leak malicious stories about them to the Portuguese Press.

Disgraced police chief Goncalo Amaral, who led the investigation, has angered the McCanns with plans to publish his own story. They have vowed to hit back once suspect status is lifted.

Mr Mitchell added: "A number of books are being published in Portugal and the UK. Kate and Gerry want the public to know the real truth."

The couple have been boosted by an "inspirational" meeting" with US dad Ed Smart, reunited with his kidnapped daughter after nine months. The encounter is shown on Wednesday's ITV1 documentary Madeleine One Year On: Campaign for Change.

'All proceeds will go to the Find Madeline Fund'


 
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'Lies' of Maddie parents


'Lies' of Maddie parents
26 April 2008
The Sun
Antonella Lazzeri


The disgraced cop who led the search for Maddie McCann has written a money spinning book - pointing the finger at her parents.

Goncalo Amaral, 48, who was booted off the case after five months, refuses to believe Gerry and Kate McCann had nothing to do with the tot's disappearance.

He authorised their status as suspects, but was removed after allegedly enjoying boozy lunch breaks while leading the hunt in Portugal.

Amaral's book True Lies accuses Maddie's parents of dumping her body at sea after accidentally killing her. He says British police were too close to the couple and did not follow up leads he suggested.

His lawyer Paulo Santos said of the book: "It's not speculative, but factual."

But the McCanns' spokesman Clarence Mitchell said: "We are not surprised at this.

"It is sad that people feel the need to make money out of Madeleine."
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McCanns blast top cop's book


McCanns blast top cop's book
26 April 2008
Daily Star
Jerry Lawton

Plan to cash in on Madeleine case


The boozy detective sacked from the Madeleine McCann inquiry is to publish a book about the case.

Her parents have branded the move "despicable".

Goncalo Amaral, 48, spent five months in charge of the inquiry into Madeleine's disappearance in Praia da Luz, Portugal, on May 3 last year, two days before her fourth birthday.

He was sacked after criticising British police, claiming they were too sympathetic towards Madeleine's parents Gerry, 39, and Kate, 40.

Amaral was also overheard openly discussing the evidence during a boozy lunch.

He has now written his own account of the case under the title True Lies. The McCanns were said to be "horrified".

Their spokesman Clarence Mitchell warned: "Kate and Gerry's lawyers will be among the first to study this book."
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Nobody loves to torture a 'bad mother' like the British


14 April 2008
The Times
Melanie Reid


* The persecution of Kate McCann is the cruellest thing I have seen

How many centuries of accumulated spite and misogyny, I wonder, went into the latest twist in the Madeleine McCann saga. Did the British television presenters feel the remotest twinge of conscience as they sensationally reported - second-hand via a Spanish television station - the leaks from the Portuguese police portraying Kate McCann in the worst possible light, as a mother who had left her children to cry?
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Maddie cops not got clue


Maddie cops not got clue
The Sunday Mirror
13 April 2008
Lori Campbell


Police in Portugal will tell prosecutors tomorrow they have come up with nothing new after a trip to the UK in a last-gasp bid to crack the Madeleine McCann case.

They will admit that fresh interviews with the "Tapas Seven" - parents Kate and Gerry McCanns' friends - have yielded no new clues.

An insider said: "They maintained what they said in their original statements. There are discrepancies - but no gaping contradictions."

The three-man police team had hoped to expose inconsistencies in the McCanns' and the Tapas Sevens' stories.

They have been asked to return to Portugal next month to take part in a reconstruction of the night Madeleine vanished from her hotel in Praia da Luz last May.

Police insiders there have said the friends have demanded a private jet and five-star hotels on their return.

But the McCanns' spokesman dismissed the claims as "utter rubbish."

And last night one of the friends urged the Portuguese police to concentrate on the hunt for four-year-old Madeleine.

Jane Tanner said: "If it wasn't such a serious matter some of the things that are being said about us would be laughable."

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We agreed to keep a closer eye on the kids..hours later Maddie had disappeared


11 April 2008
The Sun
Antonella Lazzeri
McCanns' fury at police leak


What mum Kate told cops

KATE McCann told cops she and husband Gerry agreed to watch their kids more closely after daughter Madeleine said she'd been crying on her own, it was revealed yesterday.

But within hours of the conversation, the innocent youngster had vanished from their Portugal holiday apartment.

A Spanish TV station yesterday told viewers it had obtained the full statements Kate and Gerry gave to Portuguese police after Maddie disappeared on May 3 last year.

In them, said Telecinco TV, Kate re- called how the tot asked why she had not come to her room when she and her brother and sister were sobbing the night before she went missing.
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'Mummy, why didn't you come when we were crying last night'; McCanns' police statement


11 April 2008
The Sun
Antonella Lazzeri

What Maddie asked parents hours before she vanished

BEWILDERED Madeleine McCann asked mum Kate why she had not come to her room to stop her crying just hours before she vanished, it was revealed yesterday.

The detail emerged after a Spanish TV station obtained the FULL police statements made by parents Kate and Gerry. In them Kate admits that over breakfast on the day Maddie, three, vanished she asked why her mum did not comfort her and twins Sean and Amelie.
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