Nou dat vind ik een beetje apart, zouden daar veel Britten komen oid? Wat kan dat resort er aan doen dat er een paar onverantwoordelijke ouders niet goed op hun kind hebben gelet, hopelijk valt het mee voor de eigenaar van het resort en trekt het gastenaantal nog aan, het zou toch te gek voor woorden zijn dat er een resort failliet gaat vanwege de fouten van de McCanns? En tja die paar ramptoeristen die daar op af komen die zullen het verlies van de gezinnen met kinderen niet goedmaken, denk ik.quote:This is the deserted Ocean Club holiday resort almost a year after Madeleine McCann went missing.
The poolside tapas restaurant, where her parents were dining when the three-year-old vanished from their apartment, has been shut.
The pool is practically unused while the neighbouring tennis courts are almost permanently empty. Yesterday afternoon, in spite of clear blue skies, only four people sat beside it.
The deserted swimming pool at Portuguese holiday resort Praia da Luz
One employee said: 'Maybe people are a bit scared to come here. They are a bit jittery. I don't think the Madeleine case has helped. It is very quiet here at the moment but maybe that's also because it's the beginning of the season.'
Another employee said: 'I have worked here for three seasons and at the moment this season is so quiet I am wondering if I will last the next three months. This is the quietest I have ever known it at the Ocean Club.'
The tapas restaurant became infamous after Madeleine's disappearance. Her parents, Kate and Gerry McCann, were dining there with friends while she slept in their apartment about 100 yards away.
The alarm was raised at 10pm when Mrs McCann left the restaurant to check on her three children and discovered the eldest had gone.
Almost 12 months on, the pool area, including the restaurant which has reopened as a snack bar, closes at 6pm or earlier. Mark Warner, the tour operator which co-owns the Ocean Club, admitted today that bookings were down.
But a company spokesman denied the existence of a 'Madeleine effect' on tourism.
He said: 'Business is lower than it was at this time last year but Mark Warner believes that is down to Easter coming early. This it true across the whole industry. We expect business to improve as the season moves on.'
He said the tapas bar had been shut during an 'overhaul' of catering across the Ocean Club.
Another restaurant is open at a separate part of the resort complex, which is spread across Praia da Luz.
Holidaymakers staying at the Ocean Club now receive three separate printed sheets warning about security and safety.
One headed: 'Security and Safety Alert' states: 'Please may we repeat to all parents that children under the age of 12 must be accompanied and supervised at all times.'
Another states: 'We ask guests for their own security to always close windows (or security shutters) whenever they leave their accommodation, even if it is only for a few minutes.'
The McCanns had shut the rear patio doors to their apartment but left them unlocked as they sat down to eat. They believe their daughter was abducted by a man who entered through the doors and left by a window.
Mark Warner said security guidance was issued regularly and not in response to Madeleine's disappearance.
Madeleine McCann has been missing since May 2007
The spokesman said: 'The McCanns would have received similar safety guidelines. Praia da Luz is probably the safest place on the planet over the last year because there have been a lot of police down there.'
Today the town appears very quiet with almost all posters appealing for help in finding Madeleine, which used to appear in shop and apartment windows and car windscreens, now removed.
One faded photograph of the little girl appears on the noticeboard beside the Catholic church where Mrs McCann would pray regularly when she was still in Praia da Luz.
The couple left in September after being made official police suspects. They deny any involvement in Madeleine's disappearance.
The beach in Praia da Luz remains almost empty. Holidaymaker John Trcek, 53, from Sheffield, who has visited the town five times in 18 months, said: 'This is the quietest I have ever known it. I am trying to buy an apartment at the moment and the guy I am buying it from thinks it's the "Maddy effect".
One tour company told me they had had cancellations because of what happened.' But Miguel Domingues, who runs the Azure Seas gift shop on the seafront, was bullish.
He said: 'This is the beginning of the season. Everything will be very good for this year.
'The tour operators tell me they have been selling very well in the Algarve. What happened last year is not an issue.
'When people go to New York, they visit the site of the Twin Towers. Now people come here to visit where Madeleine went missing. It is morbid tourism.'
Dat laatste is in ieder geval cruciaal indeed, maar ik vrees dat Madeleine nooit wordt gevonden, daar heeft iemand die daar verstand van heeft wel voor gezorgd. Naar verluidt had Gerry McCann een boek bij zich, hoe men zich ontdoet van een lijk, "no stone unturned" van Steve Jackson, waar later de titel door de McCanns de slogan is gebruikt "Leaving No Stone Unturned", pure speculation of course...quote:Op zaterdag 5 april 2008 11:36 schreef kahaarin het volgende:
>knip<
Dit kan imho 2 kanten op gaan, of ze hebben zich zo ingegraven dat de zaak openblijft en ze arguido af zijn binnenkort of ze hebben juist door al dat gespin in het nieuws er voor gezorgd dat ze dat nooit kunnen maken en ze zijn inderdaad de komende 20 jaar arguido.
Hoe dan ook, er is blijkbaar geen sluitend bewijs voor de schuld/onschuld van de ouders, de bewijzen in dat app zijn grondig om zeep geholpen door die kudde 'helpers' die door de kamer is gebanjerd, de pers is monddood gemaakt, de PJ zo tegengewerkt dat het me verbaasd dat er nog actie ondernomen wordt, volgens mij is de enige oplossing het vinden van, waarschijnlijk, het lijkje van Maddy. Dan weten ze iig wat haar is overkomen en kunnen ze vandaaruit verder rechercheren.
Exact! Maar het blijft toch curieus dat Kate McCann met name al vorig jaar juni, en ik had dit al eind mei gelezen, zich met missing children zou gaan bezig houden ipv haar parttime-baan als huisarts voor te zetten : "Kate, 38, is now considering leaving her job as a GP to campaign full-time. A family friend said: “They have come to realise that this is a major issue. If they can act as figureheads then that’s all well and good. June 17, 2007 The Times Nogmaals, er klopt iets niet, het voelt niet goed, er spelen andere zaken/belangen mee...quote:McCanns and their attendance
I’ve taken a backseat lately with regard the McCann case because it has been purely spin with no real news. I have a feeling that repeating words on a daily basis is only helping to perpetuate the thorny bush of ‘they say I say.’
However – the news with regard the McCanns being present at the Europe-wide alert system for cases of child abduction has really flummoxed me to the point that I feel something should be said.
Putting things into perspective: The McCanns are ‘parents’ who have (by their own admission) left their children alone while they socialised with friends, they are suspects in Madeleine’s disappearance and have nothing whatsoever to substantiate their claims that Madeleine had been abducted, yet they are attending a debate with regard child abduction? Where is the sense in that?
What can the McCanns add to this debate? Do not leave your children unattended while you socialise? Please remember to get a babysitter to watch over your children? That’s common sense with most parents and does not exactly correspond with the ‘Amber Alert’.
But perhaps rather than asking the above questions people should be questioning why the European Parliament has allowed the McCanns to be present.
Wider agenda perhaps?
To round off - According to BBC News : “The couple's spokesman Clarence Mitchell said they were happy to use Madeleine's disappearance to boost any moves which would improve the recovery rate of missing children in the 27 EU countries.”
That statement is as questionable as Gerry McCann’s reply when the risk assessment was mentioned about Madeleine’s eye defect: “We thought it was possible this could hurt her. Her abductor might do something to her eye. But in marketing terms it was a good ploy.”
Not exactly the words a person would expect from a protective parent of their apparent missing child.
Geeft niets, ik heb hetzelfde gedacht, daar is vast wel een slaatje uit te slaan idd.quote:Op zaterdag 5 april 2008 13:40 schreef Suko het volgende:
Nou ja, als er iets ernstig heeft plaatsgevonden waar dan ook dan is het zowel afstotend als aantrekkelijk. Maar het plaatsje Praia da Luz heeft voor een lange lange tijd associaties met Madeleine McCann, het kan zelfs mogelijk een soort van bedevaartsoord worden, marketingluitjes (McCann-related?) weten daar wel raad mee....sorry voor dit cynische ondertoontje.
Waar rook is, is vuur bedoel je?quote:Dat laatste is in ieder geval cruciaal indeed, maar ik vrees dat Madeleine nooit wordt gevonden, daar heeft iemand die daar verstand van heeft wel voor gezorgd. Naar verluidt had Gerry McCann een boek bij zich, hoe men zich ontdoet van een lijk, "no stone unturned" van Steve Jackson, waar later de titel door de McCanns de slogan is gebruikt "Leaving No Stone Unturned", pure speculation of course...![]()
Niets meer aan toe te voegen, onbegrijpelijk allemaal.quote:Anyway, Charlotte heeft een commentaar afgescheiden die zo ongeveer verwoord wat we hier en daar in posten ook hebben beschreven:
Dit is idd een tenenkrommend bericht, je eigen kind is nog maar zo kort geleden verdwenen, dan wil je je toch nergens anders druk om maken dan om haar veilige terugkomst? Dan ga je niet nadenken over carreermoves en plannetjes voor later.quote:Exact! Maar het blijft toch curieus dat Kate McCann met name al vorig jaar juni, en ik had dit al eind mei gelezen, zich met missing children zou gaan bezig houden ipv haar parttime-baan als huisarts voor te zetten : "Kate, 38, is now considering leaving her job as a GP to campaign full-time. A family friend said: “They have come to realise that this is a major issue. If they can act as figureheads then that’s all well and good. June 17, 2007 The Times Nogmaals, er klopt iets niet, het voelt niet goed, er spelen andere zaken/belangen mee...
Mrs. Jones, , Me and Mrs. Jones, we've got a thing going one.....quote:Krijg nou wat, Metodo 3 heeft weer eens een sigthing ontvangen (werd ook al weer tijd he), van een zekere Mrs Jones...The Sun
Scherp!quote:Op zaterdag 5 april 2008 16:43 schreef kahaarin het volgende:
<knip>
[..]
Mrs. Jones, , Me and Mrs. Jones, we've got a thing going one.....![]()
That thing is: spin, 15 minutes of fame and a headline or 2, ik hoor het Clarrie gewoon al zingen.
Wel nee, geen advocaten nodig, alles is al doorgenomen, de vragen én de antwoorden...Het wordt bijna voorgesteld als een gespekje onder het genot van een kopje thee.quote:"They will be interviewed as witnesses and are free to leave at any time, said a spokeswoman for Leicestershire Constabulary. No lawyers will be present. There had been speculation that diaries and Madeleine's Cuddle Cat toy could be seized by Portuguese officers, but it is understood that no property will be searched or seized. The Portuguese officers are expected to land at East Midlands Airport from Faro at 12.20pm on Monday. They will be met by British officers and are expected to avoid the public arrivals lounge by being escorted out through a private exit once they have cleared customs. The Portuguese officers are staying at a hotel in Leicester city centre.
Wat miij betreft, een zware belediging naar de PJ, dat de McCanns veelal afwezig zijn tijdens hun bezoek.quote:"The process of interviewing key witnesses will last several weeks but the Portuguese detectives will return home from interviewing the Tapas Seven at the end of the week. Madeleine's parents Kate, 40, and her husband, 39-year-old Gerry, remain arguidos - formal suspects - in the case. The McCanns will not be in Leicestershire for the duration of the visit by Mr Rebelo and his team. On Wednesday, they travel to Brussels to lobby for better co-ordination between European countries when a child goes missing."
Waarbij het natuurlijk verbazingwekkend blijft hoeveel er niet klopt in dit verhaal van met name Clarence Mitchell. Alleen al dit stukje: "Mitchell said he was not surprised by the inconsistencies in the initial accounts. 'You had nine people in a bar without watches on, without mobile phones, and absolute panic set in when they realised what had happened." Zum kotzen...quote:Madeleine: in Praia da Luz, there's not even a traffic cop
The 'missing' posters are mostly torn down. The hotels are preparing for the first of the season's tourists. Police are still talking to witnesses, but there is growing acceptance that Madeleine McCann's disappearance will never be explained
The good news for the reception desk at the Ocean Club resort in Praia da Luz is that they have every prospect of a full house for late April and early May. It is particularly welcome this year, as tourist numbers have been down because of the pound weakening against the euro and Easter falling early.
The downside is that many of their guests are likely to arrive not with bathing costumes, tennis rackets and sun cream, but with laptops, microphones and television cameras. And their focus will be on the one flat in the Mark Warner holiday complex that has lain empty for 11 months: Apartment 5-A, where Madeleine McCann disappeared on the evening of 3 May, 2007, a few days before her fourth birthday.
The media's first-anniversary invasion has not yet begun in earnest. Last week only a trickle of British newspaper reporters, the odd photographer and a team from al-Jazeera television were in evidence. There was no sign of the Polícia Judiciária, Portugal's equivalent of the CID, nor even an ordinary traffic cop, outside the flat where Madeleine was last seen. Only a flimsy silver chain barring entry to the back garden entrance recalls the tragedy, the agonising efforts to find Madeleine that became a worldwide campaign and the deepening mystery surrounding the case after her parents, Kate and Gerry, were interrogated and declared arguidos, or formal suspects, by the Portuguese authorities last August.
The posters of Madeleine that filled every shop window in the weeks after her disappearance are gone. Just one faded image of her is still on display - on the bulletin board outside the church, where the local Catholic and Anglican communities hold an ecumenical service every Friday to highlight the case of Madeleine and of other missing children around the world.
Poignantly, a poster recently pinned up at the entrance of the Baptista supermarket, a few dozen yards downhill from the flat where Madeleine last hugged her mother goodnight, pleads in Portuguese: 'Não te esqueças de mim.' Don't forget about me.
In recent weeks, to the alarm of Madeleine's parents back home in the Leicestershire village of Rothley, that had seemed a real possibility. In Portugal the active search for their missing daughter by the police and hundreds of local residents on the oceanfront, in gardens, olive groves and scrubland has long since ended.
The police, and the Spanish-based Metodo 3 detective agency hired by the McCanns, are still responding to 'sightings' or claims of fresh evidence of what has happened to her, but these have become less and less frequent. A recent claim by a taxi driver on the eastern end of the Algarve coast, near the Spanish border, that he had driven Madeleine and four adults to a nearby hotel on the night of her disappearance appears to have come to nothing. So, too, has a freelance search by a Madeira-based lawyer of a lake down a twisting potholed lane outside the Algarve's old Moorish capital, Silves.
The police investigation, and the often lurid local newspaper headlines accompanying it, have gone quiet. Last October a new officer was put in charge. The official spokesman for the investigation has been replaced by two Lisbon-based officials who were politely replying last week to all press inquiries by saying: 'Sorry. It is our policy that we cannot comment at all on the case.'
In fact, there are now signs of new movement in the investigation - and every prospect that, starting in the next few days and building towards the first anniversary of Madeleine's disappearance, her case will again be front-page news in Portugal, Britain and around the world.
Early this week a team of Portuguese police is due to travel to Britain to re-interview witnesses from the so-called 'Tapas Nine' - the seven friends who, along with the McCanns, were dining at a poolside tapas restaurant 50 yards from Apartment 5-A on the night Madeleine disappeared. Particularly in the light of a comment by Portugal's Justice Minister, Alberto Costa, two months ago that the investigation was nearing its conclusion, the mission is likely to prove critical in determining in what direction, and at what pace, the next stage of the largest police probe in Portugal's history is now taken.
The only other person named as a suspect in the case would already seem to be out of the frame, to the cautious relief of his distraught family, veteran pillars of Praia da Luz's expatriate British community. Robert Murat, 33, was on a week's visit from Britain to his mother Jenny's home, yards from Apartment 5-A, when Madeleine disappeared. But he cancelled his return flight, stayed on in Praia da Luz, and was informally helping the investigators as a translator when a British Sunday newspaper journalist told the police she thought he was acting suspiciously.
They brought him in for questioning and - largely, Portuguese polices sources have said, on the strength of British crime profilers - formally made him an arguido in mid-May. They secured a routine three-month extension to his suspect status last January, but in recent weeks have returned a computer, his clothing and other property removed from the home that Murat shares with his mother.
The McCanns, too, are drawing some hope from the Portuguese police team's visit to Britain. Their spokesman, Clarence Mitchell, said yesterday that while the couple had made clear their readiness to speak to the investigators, or even to return to Portugal if required, 'there has been no request to talk to them'. He also revealed that, contrary to media speculation in recent months, the visiting investigators have conveyed no plans to conduct any searches in Britain, to take possession of Kate's personal diary, or of Cuddle Cat - Madeleine's favourite toy - which Kate constantly clasped by her side during the weeks after her disappearance.
But an unprecedentedly detailed account of the days and weeks after Madeleine's disappearance from a well-placed Portuguese police source suggests that - after numerous fruitless twists and turns in the investigation, and in the absence of either a 'body or a confession' - the police focus is on the accounts of the McCanns and their friends of precisely what happened to Madeleine on the night she vanished.
The source has not suggested there is evidence that Madeleine's parents were involved in the disappearance, or the possible death, of their child - a suggestion that Kate and Gerry have passionately denied, pressing home the point last month in securing a half-million-pound settlement from the Express newspaper group over stories suggesting they were implicated. Indeed, amid the rash of reports last September suggesting there was DNA proof linking Madeleine's parents to her death, the same police source emphasised that the DNA samples had proved to be degraded, incomplete, possibly contaminated and inconclusive. But the source has said that, almost from the outset, particularly amid growing Portuguese police scepticism that Murat had any connection with Madeleine's disappearance, the 'key' to the investigation had been in unravelling what the Polícia Judiciária felt were 'difficulties and contradictions' in the accounts given by the McCanns and their friends in the immediate aftermath of the tragedy.
Part of the police concern, he said, involved details of Kate and Gerry's initial statements - whether the back window and shutters in the flat had been open or closed, for instance, and whether Gerry had entered from the front door or the back and exactly when the parents or their friends had checked to make sure Madeleine and her then two-year-old twin siblings, Sean and Amelie, were safe and well.
Equally crucial to somehow resolving the case, he said, were the accounts of the 'Tapas Nine' - and particularly Jane Tanner, who earlier this year went public in a BBC Panorama documentary with her account of having seen a man carrying a child in pink pyjamas like Madeleine's outside the McCanns' flat at 9.15pm.
'Jane at first made no mention of the pyjamas,' the source insisted. He said that this detail and a number of others about the man apparently carrying a child emerged only later in her statements to the police. He said the initial statements by the McCanns and each of their friends had 'never fit together' and that the police were particularly sceptical when, after the group had had time to talk a few days later, an 'agreed time-line' seemed to emerge.
Mitchell said yesterday that, far from opposing the latest move by the Portuguese police to press their concerns over the 'Tapas Nine' testimony, the McCanns, Tanner and their other friends eagerly welcomed the opportunity, in the hope of finally bringing the legal process to an end and focusing 'on what really matters - Madeleine'. Some of the friends, he said, had even considered going back to Portugal to try to speed an end to the investigation.
Mitchell said he was not surprised by the inconsistencies in the initial accounts. 'You had nine people in a bar without watches on, without mobile phones, and absolute panic set in when they realised what had happened. They were running around and then several hours later they were forced to sit down and recount their movements in exact detail and they were at sixes and sevens... We would say that, if the police had a perfect time line across nine people, that would be a damn sight more suspicious than the fractured, illogical composite statements they might have got.'
And although Mitchell was not in Praia da Luz in the days after Madeleine disappeared, he said his personal contacts since then with Tanner and the other friends had convinced him there was 'nothing furtive or suspicious' about the time-line provided to the police. 'Everything I've seen and heard on a private, human level tells me that this is an innocent group of people who have got caught up in this awful situation and they're doing their best to try and help their friends on a decency level.'
Luis Maia, a leading Portuguese television journalist who co-authored the first of what are now five books on Madeleine in Portugal, said yesterday his gut feeling was that - barring an unexpected breakthrough, or a formal police request to re-interview Kate or Gerry - the investigation was finally nearing an inevitable end, with the mystery of the missing girl no closer to resolution.
For the parents, the next few days and weeks are likely to be difficult, with the approach of the anniversary of the disappearance of a daughter nearing her fifth birthday - especially in Rothley, in the home Kate had said she could not bear to live in again without having Madeleine back.
'Some days, for both Kate and Gerry, are better than others,' Mitchell said. 'But they still believe she is quite possibly alive. There has been no evidence to the contrary.
'And every day that goes by without her being found makes them think that she must be somewhere, very well hidden, and that someone must have her.'
How life changed for those caught in the public glare of a heart-rending case
The parents
As the first anniversary of Madeleine's disappearance draws closer, her parents are back home in the Leicestershire village of Rothley. Gerry has returned to full-time work as a cardiologist, on call, with regular NHS hours. Kate, a GP, has decided not to go back to work at a local surgery until the fate of her daughter is resolved. She takes Sean and Amelie to nursery school every day and is in frequent phone or email contact with 'Find Madeleine' campaign organisers, charities, the family's lawyers and police.
'There are good days and bad days,' says the McCanns' spokesman Clarence Mitchell, but they take hope from the belief that, in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, their daughter is still alive.
Meanwhile, they have thrown themselves into urging Britain and the rest of Europe to improve co-ordination in dealing with missing children and to adopt an American-style 'amber light' alert system to speed up attempts to find them.
That will be the core message of a British television documentary in which they plan to take part on the first anniversary of Madeleine's disappearance. 'They feel that if, God forbid, Madeleine is not found, that will be a fitting legacy for her,' says Mitchell.
The McCanns' first spokesman
Within hours of the news of Madeleine's disappearance, Alex Woolfall of the London-based PR agency Bell Pottinger was asked by Mark Warner to fly to Praia da Luz as part of a 'crisis' team to help her traumatised parents deal with the media.
'People forget there was quite a lot of hope at the time and we figured that if we got photos out someone would call up and say: "Yes, I've just spotted her."'
Woolfall says he feels the way the media behaved was 'unique and extraordinary - and I put that down to the fact that so many of the journalists out there were doing the story as parents first, and journalists second. It was: there, but for the grace of God, go we.'
With the approach of the anniversary of Madeleine's disappearance, he says, he has inevitably found himself reflecting on her parents' agony. 'This year a very good friend of mine has had a baby, and I've watched him grow over the last 12 months. And he's become an individual rather than a baby now.
'And I just cannot imagine what it would be like to have a child and bring up a child and then to have that child taken from you. I just feel deeply, deeply sad for Kate and Gerry. I don't think anyone can really imagine what is like to go out on holiday with three children and to come back with two.'
Robert Murat
'A year in hell' is how friends of Murat describe the experience of the Briton, raised in Portugal, who had been helping the police with translations for the case and suddenly found himself declared a formal suspect barely a week after the disappearance of Madeleine McCann.
In the intervening months, he, his mother and other relatives in Praia da Luz and the nearby beach village of Brugão have had to come to terms with police questioning. Murat's mother Jenny, 72, says that she, her son and others in the family have tried to stay positive and have kept a daily diary of their ordeal in an effort to help them to cope.
Now, with the police having returned Robert's possessions and agreed to his going to England, she says they are holding out hope that he may soon be released from arguido status. 'When all is said and done,' she said, 'that is still what matters - the fate of this poor little girl.'
The private investigators
Metodo 3 is a Barcelona-based agency that built its reputation on corporate fraud investigations before the McCanns engaged it on a six-month contract last year to follow up reported sightings of the missing girl throughout Europe and in Morocco.
But with its managing director, Francisco Marco Fernández, making increasingly upbeat remarks about the prospects for a breakthrough on finding Madeleine - most controversially, a statement late last year that 'God willing, we hope she will be home by Christmas' - the agency has now agreed that all comments should go through the McCanns' spokesman, Clarence Mitchell.
Metodo 3 remains on a monthly retainer of £8,000, Mitchell says. 'The agency are very good on the ground. They're very passionate and committed to the search for Madeleine.' In fact, he told The Observer, the family's hope is that the Portuguese police will ultimately close their investigation and pass on all the relevant papers to Metodo 3 to reinvigorate the search.
The family friend
Jane Tanner has been haunted by the thought that she could have prevented Madeleine's disappearance. Tanner, 38, was among the seven friends with the McCann parents at the restaurant on the night in question. She had gone back to check on her own children and is certain she saw a man carrying a pyjama-clad child nearby.
Generally, Tanner has avoided making public remarks but, in a recent BBC Panorama, she said: It's important that people know what I saw, because I believe Madeleine was abducted.'
(drama Shannon Matthews, stiefoom snijdt polsen door, stiefpa bezit kinderporno, zus en moeder/grootmoeder in het complot, Shannon wil nooit meer naar huis, alle kids in care, Daily Mail + The Sun)quote:MADDYWATCH - Anorak’s at-a-glance guide to press coverage of Madeleine McCann
DAILY TELEGRAPH: “Madeleine McCann police due to arrive in UK”
The Portuguese police are coming.
Portuguese police are due to arrive in Britain today to observe as the friends of Kate and Gerry McCann are interviewed about the night Madeleine went missing.
And Kate and Gerry McCann?
The McCanns will not be in Leicestershire for the duration of the visit by Mr Rebelo and his team. On Wednesday, they travel to Brussels to lobby MEPs for better co-ordination between European countries when a child goes missing.
They will return to Leicestershire on Thursday evening before the Portuguese officers fly home.
THE SUN: “‘Tapas seven’ face police quiz”
Not the Tapas Nine.
The “Tapas Seven” – who were having dinner with Kate and Gerry McCann when Maddie four, vanished – will be interviewed as witnesses by officers from Leicestershire Constabulary.
Portuguese detectives, led by investigation chief Paulo Rebelo, arrive in Britain today and will stay a week.
A spokeswoman for Leicestershire Constabulary said: “Leicestershire Constabulary will be co-ordinating the execution of the request for mutual legal assistance made by the Portuguese authorities. The Portuguese authorities have asked that the contents of the request and the way it is being executed be kept confidential so as not to prejudice their ongoing investigation.”
DAILY MAIL: “Portuguese detectives set to quiz ‘Tapas Seven’ in London about Madeleine ’s disappearance”
Mr Mitchell said it was “pure coincidence” that the McCanns were leaving Britain during the week of the police interviews.
He said: “To say this is a smokescreen is utter rubbish. It is pure co-incidence that police interviews are being conducted at the same time the European Parliament is sitting, and Kate and Gerry are tabling a motion.”
Madeleine McCann: More questions and no answer
quote:Who are the McCann tapas seven?
By Steve Kingstone
BBC News
As Portuguese police fly to the UK to listen in on interviews with the so-called "Tapas 7", what is known about the people who are key witnesses in the disappearance of Madeleine McCann?
Jane Tanner said she saw a man carrying a small child
The seven friends who dined with Kate and Gerry McCann on the night of Madeleine's disappearance are the central witnesses in this case.
Their evidence has been pored over by the police, and their backgrounds closely scrutinised by journalists and bloggers alike.
None of the seven is a formal suspect or "arguido". and all have cooperated willingly and voluntarily with the investigation. Bound by judicial secrecy laws, most have made no public comment about what they saw.
Their friendship goes back a long way. Four of the group - Matthew Oldfield, Russell O'Brien, David Payne and Fiona Payne - studied medicine together at Leicester University in the early 1990s - the Paynes becoming a couple.
Timeline
Doctors Kate and Gerry McCann moved to Leicestershire in 2000, and quickly became part of the medical social circle.
Three other holidaymakers completed the table at the poolside tapas restaurant on 3 May last year: Rachael Oldfield (married to Matthew), Jane Tanner (partner of Russell O'Brien) and Diane Webster (Fiona Payne's mother).
The couples had travelled to the Algarve from East Midlands and Gatwick airports, together with eight young children.
Following Madeleine's disappearance, the nine adults collectively provided the police with a timeline of the evening.
As far as they were concerned, the timeline was a common sense means of speeding up the investigation; but elements within the Portugal's Policia Judiciaria (investigating police) seem to have interpreted the move as a closing of ranks.
Either way, the timeline is absolutely key to understanding what might have happened to Madeleine.
This is how the group recalled the evening:
1730: Kate and Gerry McCann pick up their three children from afternoon tea at the Ocean Club
1800: Gerry begins a game of tennis with other guests
1840: David Payne checks on Kate and the children, at Gerry's request and sees Madeleine
1900: Gerry finishes playing tennis
2035: Kate and Gerry McCann arrive at the Ocean Club's tapas restaurant
2105: Gerry checks on his children, and sees Madeleine alive and well
2115: Having left the table to check on her own children, Jane Tanner sees a man carrying a child, close to the McCanns' apartment
2130: Matthew Oldfield checks on the McCanns' apartment. Hearing no noise from the children's bedroom, he assumes all is well and leaves without seeing Madeleine
2200: Kate McCann checks on her children. Madeleine is gone.
Key witness
Arguably the most significant witness is Jane Tanner.
She has already given detectives a detailed description of a man she saw, close to the ground floor corner apartment where the McCanns were staying.
She says he was carrying a child, dressed in pinkish pyjamas - the same colour that Madeleine was wearing that evening.
The man has never come forward or been traced by the police, leading the McCanns to conclude that Jane Tanner almost certainly witnessed their daughter being abducted.
Last November, Ms Tanner told the BBC's Panorama programme: "I know what I saw, and I think it's important that people know what I saw - because I believe Madeleine was abducted."
![]()
Based on her account, the McCanns produced an artist's impression of the man, in the hope that it might jog the memory of other holidaymakers.
Of the remaining friends, David Payne was the last person - besides Kate and Gerry McCann - to see Madeleine alive that evening, so his recollection of timing is crucial.
Matthew Oldfield was the only group member, beyond Madeleine's parents, to enter the McCanns' apartment during the dinner.
If Jane Tanner did unwittingly see Madeleine's kidnapper, the timeline suggests that the abduction took place before Mr Oldfield made his check.
But not having set foot in the children's bedroom, he cannot be sure of whether the little girl was there or not.
Finally, three of the group have offered significant evidence relating to Robert Murat, the third arguido in the case.
Russell O'Brien, Fiona Payne and Rachael Oldfield all say they saw Mr Murat later that evening, during the frantic search for Madeleine.
Their testimony is directly at odds with his assertion that he was at home with his mother all night. Robert Murat says the McCanns' three friends are, at best, confused; and, at worst, lying. But they, in turn, remain certain of what they saw.
http://www.worksopguardia(...)r-39Tapas.3955153.jpquote:Madeleine police arrive for 'Tapas Seven' interviews
A team of Portuguese police have arrived in Leicestershire to sit in on interviews with friends of Kate and Gerry McCann.
The detectives' flight from Faro landed at East Midlands Airport where they were met by British officers and escorted through a private exit.
They will observe interviews carried out by officers from Leicestershire Constabulary with friends of the McCanns - the so-called Tapas Seven - who were dining with them in the Algarve resort of Praia da Luz last year when the McCanns' daughter Madeleine disappeared.
The team, led by Paulo Rebelo, who is heading the Madeleine McCann case, will not actually question the group themselves. A spokeswoman for Leicestershire Constabulary said the group would be interviewed as witnesses and are free to leave at any time. No lawyers will be present.
The McCanns, from Rothley, Leicestershire, will not be questioned in relation to the disappearance of Madeleine.
On Wednesday, they travel to Brussels to lobby MEPs for better co-ordination between European countries when a child goes missing. They will return to Leicestershire on Thursday evening before the Portuguese officers fly home.
There had been speculation that diaries and Madeleine's Cuddle Cat toy could be seized by Portuguese officers, but it is understood that no property will be searched or seized.
The process of interviewing key witnesses will last several weeks, but the Portuguese detectives are believed to be returning home at the end of the week.
It is 11 months since Madeleine disappeared from the holiday resort of Praia da Luz.
Kate, 40, and her husband, 39-year-old Gerry, remain arguidos - formal suspects.
David Payne of een ander, ze hebben de bewuste avond niet met hem gesproken toch? Het zou dus iedereen kunnen zijn geweest die naast het app stond te roken, dat was het verhaal toch? Dat ze Murat hebben gezien terwijl hij zich achteraf hield en stond te roken? Nou sorry hoor, als er iemand in de schaduw staat dan kun je 's nachts echt niet zeker weten wie dat nu is geweest, pas nadat hij arguido werd kwamen ze daar mee naar buiten, volgens mij gewoon uit de duim gezogen.quote:Op maandag 7 april 2008 17:46 schreef Suko het volgende:
Hoi Kahaarin, wat je voorlaatste post betreft, ik geloof er niks van dat ze Murat die avond hebben gezien, maar het zou heel goed kunnen dat ook meerdere getuigen hem hebben verward met David Payne. De gelijkenis is treffend en in het schemerdonker is een vergissing zo gemaakt. En die man van de sketch, was dat niet degene (wel een pedofiel in het verleden dacht ik) die Metodo 3 zo wat van z'n erf heeft geschoten? Had er overigens niets mee te maken. Afijn, hier de gelijkenis, uit mijn eerdere post op 1 januari:
[ afbeelding ]
Ook de Daily Mail kwam daar later op 8 januari mee aanzetten. In het 14.00 uur nieuws van de BBC werd vandaag het verhoor-gebeuren low-key genoemd en dat de McCanns niet zouden worden verhoord omdat ze zelf en hun advocaten bezig zijn met hun eigen getuigen op te roepen. Hoezo Low-key, en niet melden dat ze naar Brussel (Europees parlement) gaan. Je proeft gewoon hoe de media hiermee worstelt. Hoe moeten we iets melden, en kunnnen we wel iets melden, en wat dan....etc etc. We wachten het maar weer af.![]()
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> The REAL Madeleine McCann Story < filmpje + Reminder: Blood clue puts McCann parents in crosshairs.
En in dit artikel vraagt Joana Morais zich ook al af hoe het komt dat Mitchell stelt dat niemand die avond horloges droeg en er geen mobieltjes meegenomen waren...iets wat ik gisteren&vandaag ook al aanhaalde. Hilarisch artikel en zo pijnlijk waar van Joana.quote:06/04/08 McCanns Case: 60 witnesses will be interrogated by Police Up to 60 witnesses will be questioned by police in Britain over Madeleine McCann’s disappearance.
A series of intensive interviews will start this week after a three-man team of senior Portuguese detectives fly into Leicestershire tomorrow. The trio, led by Paulo Rebelo, the chief investigator in the case, will begin by supervising the quizzing of key witness Jane Tanner.
Ms Tanner, 36, claimed she saw a man carrying a girl from the McCanns’ holiday apartment in the Algarve at about 9.15pm. Yet another witness says he was outside the flat in Praia da Luz at the same time but did not see her or the mystery man. [Jeremy Wilkins, married with Bridget O'Donnel]
After Ms Tanner’s interview, British police, supervised by the Portuguese, will spend three days speaking to remaining members of the Tapas Seven who were dining with Madeleine’s parents when she vanished.
No lawyers will be present and friends of the group stressed they are meeting the police voluntarily. They have been warned to expect lengthy bouts of questioning. The group were all dining with Kate and Gerry McCann on the night their daughter vanished on May 3 last year in Praia da Luz.
Ms Tanner’s partner Dr Russell O’Brien, 36, from Exeter, was away from the group tending to his sick daughter in the period when Madeleine was snatched. Dr Matthew Oldfield, 37, a hospital consultant from London, and his wife Rachel, 36, a recruitment consultant, were also at the tapas restaurant. David Payne, 41, a cardiovascular researcher from Leicester, was the final person, apart from the McCann family, to see Madeleine. His wife, Fiona, 34, and her mother, Diane Webster, will also be questioned by police in Leicester.
Then officers will switch their attention to three separate bands of witnesses who have been singled out by Gerry and Kate McCann as vital.
As arguidos, or official suspects, the couple have the right to demand that certain individuals be seen by police if they are believed to hold relevant information. Despite plans for the Portuguese investigators to return home on Friday, British police will mount a full-scale operation in which more than 50 more witnesses will be interviewed. These will include other guests who were staying at the resort, Ocean Club apartments staff and holidaymakers staying nearby.
Relatives of the McCanns who visited the Algarve in the weeks after she went missing are understood to be on the list, as are their current spokesman Clarence Mitchell and his predecessor Justine McGuiness. [So, apparently Clarence is not going to Brussels after all.]
Two sisters who were puzzled by a blond pair of men in their 30s acting strangely at the resort hours before Madeleine went missing are on the interview list. Jayne Jensen, 54, and Annie Wiltshire, 58, said one of the men standing outside the patio doors started to walk down a flight of steps. [Wasn't that Murat they tried to frame?]
But when he was seen by divorced mum-of-two Annie, from Maidstone, he retraced his steps and began talking to his friend. Yesterday the McCanns made an emotional plea to Portuguese detectives to clear them in time for the one year anniversary of their daughter’s disappearance.
Madeleine’s parents, both 39, hope the unprecedented move to question their friends in Britain will mark an end to their seven-month ordeal as suspects. [40 years old not 39] The couple are desperate to return to Praia da Luz to mark the tragic date with a renewed appeal for information which could unlock the mystery surrounding what happened. [???]
Clarence Mitchell confirmed that Kate and Gerry want detectives to lift their arguido status and reveal any evidence they hold. [Excuse me, who the hell are they to demand the PJ to lift their arguido status??]
He said they will not return to the Algarve while they are still suspects. [First they wouldn't leave, they would cooperate with the PJ, then they left, didn't cooperate with the PJ, then they would come back to Portugal inspite of their lawyers advices, now they won't come back...] He said: “Kate and Gerry want to return to Praia da Luz to reinvigorate our campaign to find Madeleine.” [...reinvigorate our campaign for the fund, Mr. Mitchell...??]
Source: Express (The article you are looking for does not exist. It may have been deleted.)
quote:Madeleine interviews set to begin
Kate and Gerry McCann have continued their search for Madeleine
UK police are to begin reinterviewing seven friends of Madeleine McCann's parents who were with them on the night of her disappearance.
Portuguese officers investigating the case have travelled to the UK to attend the interviews, to be carried out by Leicestershire Police.
Madeleine, of Rothley, Leicestershire, disappeared from a holiday apartment in the Algarve on 3 May last year.
Her parents, who deny any wrongdoing, remain arguidos or formal suspects.
They are not facing fresh questioning on Tuesday.
Indirect contact
The McCann's spokesman, Clarence Mitchell, said the interviews were intended to eliminate inconsistencies in the Portuguese police's timeline of events.
BBC correspondent Steve Kingstone says Kate and Gerry McCann are hoping this phase of the investigation could lead to the lifting of their arguido status.
THE WITNESSES
Matthew Oldfield
Rachael Oldfield (married to Matthew)
Russell O'Brien
Jane Tanner (partner of Russell O'Brien)
David Payne
Fiona Payne (married to David)
Diane Webster (Fiona Payne's mother)
The questioning is expected to start at Leicestershire Police's force headquarters in Enderby.
The Portuguese police, led by Paulo Rebelo, a senior detective from Lisbon who took over control of the case in October, will sit in on the interviews but will not question the witnesses directly.
They have submitted questions in advance through the Home Office - which will be put by detectives from Leicestershire Police.
None of the so-called "Tapas Seven" will have lawyers with them as they are being interviewed only as witnesses, not suspects.
Further interviews
It is thought the first to be questioned will be Jane Tanner, 37, who has already told the police she saw a man that evening carrying a child close to the family's apartment.
The interviews are expected to be completed by the end of the week.
Madeleine was last seen days before her fourth birthday, during a family holiday in the resort of Praia da Luz.
Police interviews are also planned with relatives and advisers who were with the McCanns during the early days of the investigation.
Separately, lawyers for the couple have requested that two dozen other witnesses be interviewed, including staff from the Ocean Club complex and several British holidaymakers.
quote:Friends 'accused Shannon's mother of lying' - 'Aunt' tried to get Madeleine cash
Karen Matthews
SHANNON Matthews's mother was arrested after she broke down in front of friends and told them crucial new information which she had kept from police, it can be revealed today.
The Yorkshire Post understands that when friends of Karen Matthews confronted her on Sunday and accused her of lying to detectives, she made important disclosures to them which she has not told investigators – despite weeks of detailed and lengthy questioning.
It is now believed detectives are investigating whether Mrs Matthews had any contact with Michael Donovan, the man accused of abducting her nine-year-old daughter, in the period before her disappearance.
Detectives investigating the alleged abduction of Shannon began questioning her mother yesterday after she was arrested on suspicion of attempting to pervert the course of justice. Mrs Matthews, 32, was arrested on Sunday night.
She was expected to remain in custody overnight as detectives were granted a superintendent's extension to question her.
Police had until this morning to decide whether to charge her or ask magistrates for more time.
Meanwhile, it has emerged that someone claiming to be from Shannon's family asked for money from the fund set up to help find missing Madeleine McCann.
As police searched for the missing nine-year-old, someone claiming to be her aunt asked for money from the fund.
The McCann family spokesman Clarence Mitchell said: "She didn't seem to understand why we couldn't just send a large wad of cash. I must admit I found it a bit odd,"
"The fund directors considered helping the search as a gesture of goodwill. But I was concerned about the haphazard method of approach and suggested we didn't get involved."
Today's developments are the latest twists in the investigation which has now seen four family members arrested in connection with Shannon's disappearance on February 19.
A fifth person, Shannon's stepfather Craig Meehan, 22, is in custody for his own safety after appearing in court accused of possessing indecent images of children.
It has been revealed that Donovan, who has been charged with Shannon's kidnap and imprisonment, slit his wrists while on remand at Armley jail, Leeds. He was taken to hospital before being returned to prison.
Shannon went missing in Dewsbury on February 19 and was discovered in the base of a bed at Donovan's flat in Lidgate Gardens, Batley Carr, after a 24-day police search. Donovan, 39, is Meehan's uncle.
Meehan's sister, Amanda Hyett, who lives next door to Shannon's mother and stepfather in Moorside Road, and his mother, Alice, were both arrested in connection with the alleged abduction.
The women were arrested on Thursday, the 25-year-old on suspicion of assisting an offender, and the 49-year-old on suspicion of attempting to pervert the course of justice. They were bailed pending further inquiries.
http://www.ananova.com/ne(...)nu=news.topheadlinesquote:'Tapas Seven' quizzed on Madeleine
Members of the so-called Tapas Seven are being reinterviewed by British police with Portuguese detectives investigating the disappearance of Madeleine McCann.
Jane Tanner, a friend of parents Gerry and Kate McCann, was understood to be the first to be quizzed about the night four-year-old Madeleine vanished on May 3 last year.
She says she saw a man walking away from the McCanns' apartment in Praia da Luz carrying a child.
Leicestershire Police confirmed that witnesses had arrived at police force headquarters in Enderby.
They will be questioned by British officers in the presence of three Portuguese detectives.
A police spokeswoman said: "We can confirm that Portuguese officers and witnesses are on site."
http://news.sky.com/skyne(...)312154,00.html?f=rssquote:McCanns Called Back To Portugal
Updated:14:03, Tuesday April 08, 2008
The parents of Madeleine McCann have been asked to return to Portugal for a reconstruction of her alleged abduction, Sky sources understand.
Gerry and Kate McCann
Sky's crime correspondent Martin Brunt said Portuguese authorities were requesting that Kate and Gerry McCann go back for a "Crimewatch-style" event.
But it is feared Mrs McCann, whose four-year-old daughter vanished in May last year, could find such a trip too traumatic, Brunt said.
He added the reconstruction could involve friends - dubbed the Tapas Seven - who were dining with the McCanns while the child was allegedly snatched from the family's holiday home in a Portuguese resort.
The parents' spokesman Clarence Mitchell told Sky News: "Kate and Gerry very much welcome the idea of any reconstruction that is televised... that could generate important new calls and new leads in the search for Madeleine."
Both Kate and Gerry McCann are still official suspects in the Portuguese police's probe into the girl's disappearance.
Mr Mitchell said: "(The McCanns) and their friends want to resolve this - they want to make it clear to the police that there is no evidence to implicate Kate and Gerry and that they should be eliminated from the inquiry.
"The family will do whatever is necessary to assist the police and this particular (reconstruction) proposal is just that."
The news comes as British officers began questioning members of the Tapas Seven.
Three Portuguese detectives, led by Paulo Rebelo, are sitting in on the interviews, believed to be with friends Jane Tanner and her partner Russell O'Brien, at Leicestershire Constabulary's headquarters in Enderby.
Je leest in bovenstaande artikel al een aantal argumenten waarop die reconstructie in Praia da Luz mogelijk niet doorgaat...het zal mij verbazen als de PJ dát voor elkaar krijgt! Oveirgens zitten die Praia da Luz-jes daar ook niet op te wachten, die ramptoerisiten, dus weer negatieve publiciteit, kunnen ze missen al kiespijn, maar ja, wat moet, dat moet.quote:"Gerry and Kate McCann have been asked to return to Portugal to take part in a large-scale re-enactment of the hours surrounding Madeleine's disappearance.
The McCanns' lawyers have met the Portuguese police authorities who requested that they return to the resort of Praia da Luz where their daughter disappeared almost a year ago. Today they were locked in negotiations about what the re-enactment should contain and what purpose it would serve.
While the couple are willing to help keep the case in the public eye, they are concerned about going back to Praia da Luz while their status as official suspects remains, and are seeking assurances that any re-construction is used to generate new leads in the hunt for their missing daughter.
Friends of the couple said that Mrs McCann may be too traumatised to take part. One said: "There has been no apparent thought given to her emotional position in taking part in such a re-enactment."
A family source said the McCanns had not ruled out taking part and the issue was under discussion. He said: "There are loads of questions still to be addressed such as whether the twins, Sean and Amelie, will be required and what the actual re-enactment will be used for.
"No-one knows whether it will be done behind closed doors or whether it will be a Crimewatch-style reconstruction used to try and generate new leads. All these types of things need to be ironed out before a decision is made." Any reconstruction would be an unusual move for the Portuguese police as it is not a tactic normally used in investigations.
The BBC show Crimewatch approached the Portuguese authorities shortly after Madeleine, 4, disappeared last May, but were turned down and told it was not normal practise. A couple of possible dates have been discussed, the earliest so far being in mid-May. It won't take place in or around the first anniversary of Madeleine's disappearance on May 3.
En verder heeft Kate McCann moeite terug te keren naar Praia da Luz (ivm herinneringen qua Madeleine) vanwege de mogelijk komende reconstrucitie, maar die reactie was natuurlijk te voorzien...Mother 'upset' at Madeleine request > yorkshirepost.co.uk Natuurlijk zijn de McConns bang om terug te keren...als nog steeds formeel verdachten. Als ze terug gaan zullen de adcovaten IMO bedwingen dat ze weer vrij naar de UK terug kunnen keren, no doubt about that! En verder is die hotline, die ze zeggen te introduceren allang al in gebruik. Joana Morais legt uit:quote:Jane and Russell "grilled" by the PJ: Witnesses with bad memory 24horas
Jane Tanner did not even manage to repeat the description of the man she claimed to have seen with a child in the arms in that fateful night
Text by Carlos Tomas, in Leicester
(Thanks to Joana Morais for translation)
Jane Tanner, one of the main witnesses in the process of Maddie's disappearance, yesterday again, gave a different account from the previous ones. Questioned by the PJ team that was sent to England, Jane did not manage to explain how, when and where she saw the supposed kidnapper - the same that, in November, she described in a very detailed way for the making of a sketched portrait of the suspect. Yesterday, Tanner could not even tell if she went to check on her own children in the bedroom at the Ocean Club. The sentence "I do not remember", ended up being her most frequent answer. "She entered very calm and even smiled. When she went out she was trembling and her face was very red. She did not speak with anyone", described to 24horas a source at the headquarters from the Leicester police.
We were able to establish that Tanner was confronted with the fact that, in her first statement, back in May, she said nothing relevant, later said that she saw a man carrying, which seemed to her, a child in his arms and, in November, she described the alleged kidnapper. The answer was: “I do not remember it well anymore” .The investigators even asked Jane to give again the description of the person, but the witness gave different indications from those that were used to make the drawing that ran throughout the world.
Also heard yesterday was Russell O'Brien, Jane's husband, who says he had gone to see the children at the same time that Maddie disappeared. He said, back in May, that the children had vomited, but the management of the resort Ocean Club assured that, on that night, nobody asked for any change of bed sheets. Questioned, Russell could not explain the discrepancy.
Today there will be cross-examinations to David and Fiona Payne, who organized the holidays of the group in the Praia da Luz.
-----------------------------------------------------------------quote:09/04/08
116000, the single EU hotline number for missing children is NOT a McCann Idea
The TRUTH
116000, the single EU hotline number for missing children
IP/07/188
Brussels, 15 February 2007
The Commission has adopted today the Decision reserving the 116000 telephone number in all Member States as a hotline for reporting missing children. Other common Europe-wide telephone services of social value starting with 116 may soon be reserved following this Decision.
"I am delighted that today the first major step towards a single EU hotline number for missing children has been taken," said EU Telecom Commissioner Viviane Reding. "I urge Member States to act now to make this a reality, so that Europe's parents will soon know that they are able to call this number and get immediate help."
The first number to be reserved Europe-wide is 116000. All other numbers beginning with 116 are also reserved for social services in Europe and this Decision is binding on Member States. These freephone numbers and the services they provide will benefit citizens by helping those in difficulty, or by contributing to their well-being or safety. Meer, zie de gegeven links.
Goed dat ik nog even keek, dit staat nu bij mij ook onder [CTRL] C.quote:Op woensdag 9 april 2008 12:10 schreef Suko het volgende:
Met een potje zout lezen svp maar toch...
[..]
En verder heeft Kate McCann moeite terug te keren naar Praia da Luz (ivm herinneringen qua Madeleine) vanwege de mogelijk komende reconstrucitie, maar die reactie was natuurlijk te voorzien...Mother 'upset' at Madeleine request > yorkshirepost.co.uk Natuurlijk zijn de McConns bang om terug te keren...als nog steeds formeel verdachten. Als ze terug gaan zullen de adcovaten IMO bedwingen dat ze weer vrij naar de UK terug kunnen keren, no doubt about that! En verder is die hotline, die ze zeggen te introduceren allang al in gebruik. Joana Morais legt uit:
[..]
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> The REAL Madeleine McCann Story < filmpje + Reminder: Blood clue puts McCann parents in crosshairs.
http://www.anorak.co.uk/madeleine-mccann/182833.htmlquote:DAILY STAR (front page): “MADDIE MUM TO RELIVE SNATCH AGONY”
After the generous donation to the McCanns’ fighting fund, the Star now keeps missing Madeleine in the public eye.
DAILY EXPRESS (front page): “MADLEINE…”
She’s back…
“…POLICE WANT PARENTS BACK IN PORTUGAL”
Express gets Madeleine back on front page. Well, it does have a libel bill to pay…
THE HERALD: “Plan to reconstruct Madeleine’s disappearance ‘upsets’ Kate McCann”
Kate McCann is “upset” at a decision by police to invite her and Gerry back to Portugal to take part in a reconstruction, a friend of the couple said yesterday.
Portuguese officers have invited the McCanns to participate in a reconstruction of the night Madeleine vanished from their holiday apartment in the resort of Praia da Luz on May 3 last year…
The friend added: “The family will consider it. If it’s felt there’s a chance of it helping to find Madeleine then, of course, they will do it. But given it is a year on, you have to wonder about the value of it.”
But everything must be done to find Madeleine. And what of the facts?
Kate, 40, a GP, has not returned to work and has remained at home in Rothley, Leicestershire, since her daughter disappeared. Gerry, 39, has returned to work as a heart surgeon.
Such are the facts. And the reconstruction?
Says Clarence Mitchell, the McCanns’ spokesman: “However, Kate and Gerry would very much welcome a Crimewatch-style reconstruction which is broadcast for millions of people to see and could generate important new leads and fresh information.”
THE TIMES: “New anguish for Gerry and Kate McCann over police tactic”
Says Clarence Mitchell: “It’s untrue to say that Kate and Gerry have been called back or summoned back.”
Robert Murat, the other official suspect in the case, will take part in the reconstruction if he is asked to.
THE INDEPENDENT: “Portuguese police want McCanns to return”
The four-year-old’s parents, family friends and other holiday-makers are required to return next month to the Ocean Club in the Algarve resort of Praia da Luz where they were dining at a tapas bar on 3 May.
After reporting the disappearance at about 10pm that night, Mr and Mrs McCann initially remained in the resort but have not travelled again to Portugal since returning to Britain after being named as arguidos – official suspects – on 7 September.
THE GUARDIAN: “McCanns ponder return to Praia da Luz”
Kate and Gerry McCann are considering returning to Portugal to stage a reconstruction of the events surrounding the disappearance of their daughter, it has emerged.
So the McCanns will return to Portugal, to help the police?
Clarence Mitchell: “However, it was ‘very unlikely’ that they would agree to return to Portugal while they were still under investigation, he said.
THE SCOTSMAN: “McCanns set up hotline for abductions”
The parents of missing four-year-old Madeleine McCann are setting up a dedicated information hotline that will be available across Europe for when police suspect a child has been abducted. Kate and Gerry McCann are believed to have already reserved the number – 116 000.
Voor de volledigheid.quote:Ouders Madeleine McCann in Europees Parlement
09-04-2008 14:13
BRUSSEL (ANP) – De ouders van de verdwenen Britse peuter Madeleine McCann komen donderdag naar het Europees Parlement. Ze praten met europarlementariërs over plannen voor een Europees alarmsysteem voor ontvoerde kinderen.
Maddy McCann verdween vorig jaar mei tijdens een vakantie in Portugal. Het meisje was toen drie jaar. Haar ouders Gerry en Kate hebben sindsdien een internationale campagne opgezet om het meisje terug te vinden.
De ouders zijn zelf sinds enige tijd ook verdachte in de zaak. Ze overwegen binnenkort terug te gaan naar de Algarve om op verzoek van de Portugese politie mee te werken aan een reconstructie van de avond van de verdwijning van het meisje.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2007/sep/26/ukcrime.madeleinemccann?gusrc=rss&feed=uknewsquote:Madeleine McCann case
A list of the key events in the disappearance of Madeleine McCann on Thursday May 3 at the Ocean Club in Praia da Luz
James Sturcke and Angela Balakrishnan guardian.co.uk, Wednesday April 9 2008 Article historyAbout this articleClose This article was first published on guardian.co.uk on Wednesday April 09 2008. It was last updated at 16:26 on April 09 2008.Thursday May 3 2007: Madeleine disappears from a holiday apartment at the Ocean Club resort in the Algarve village of Praia da Luz, while her parents, Kate and Gerry McCann, dine with friends at a nearby tapas restaurant.
Friday May 4: The McCanns make an emotional plea for Madeleine's safe return, directly appealing to their daughter's abductors and speaking of their "anguish and despair".
Saturday May 5: Madeleine's aunt, Philomena McCann, criticises the Portuguese police, claiming they are playing down her disappearance and are being "uncommunicative". Detectives say they believe she was abducted and is still alive and in Portugal. They also say they have a sketch of a suspect.
Wednesday May 9: A Norwegian tourist, Marie Olli, says she believes she saw Madeleine at a Moroccan petrol station asking a man: "Can I see mummy soon?" On the same day, a British man reports seeing a girl matching her description near the Ibis hotel in Marrakesh.
Monday May 14: Police launch a search at the Portuguese home of a British expatriate, Robert Murat, 100 yards from where Madeleine disappeared. He is questioned, but not formally arrested.
Tuesday May 15: Police class Murat as an "arguido", or someone who has not been arrested or charged but is being treated by police as more than a witness. He claims he is being made a scapegoat in the investigation.
Saturday May 12: The McCanns mark Madeleine's fourth birthday by calling for people to redouble their efforts to find her.
Thursday May 24: Madeleine's family release what is believed to be the last photograph taken of her before she disappeared.
Friday May 25: In their first interviews, the McCanns say the "guilt" of not being with Madeleine will never leave them. After pressure from the McCanns, their legal team and the British government, police release a description of the man seen carrying a child on the night of Madeleine's disappearance. The man is described as white, approximately 35 to 40 years old, of medium build and 5ft 10ins tall. He was wearing a dark jacket, light beige trousers and dark shoes.
Wednesday June 6: Madeleine's parents deny any involvement in her abduction when questioned by a German journalist at a press conference in Berlin.
Saturday June 16: A British couple report seeing a small blonde girl in the Maltese capital, Valletta. A full-scale investigation is launched in the wake of a number of other possible sightings.
Sunday June 17: Portuguese police say Madeleine's friends and family may have unwittingly destroyed vital evidence in the first few hours after her presumed abduction, during their search for her. Chief Inspector Olegario Sousa says their well-meaning actions could prove "fatal" for the investigation.
Thursday June 28: Spanish police arrest an Italian man and a Portuguese woman suspected of trying to extort money from Madeleine's parents by offering them information about the missing girl.
Friday July 6: Dutch police reveal they have arrested a man in Eindhoven suspected of attempting to defraud Gerry and Kate McCann by demanding ¤2m (£1.35m) for information on her whereabouts.
Friday August 3: Details emerge of a possible sighting of Madeleine in Belgium. A child therapist says she is "100% sure" she saw the girl at a restaurant in the Flemish town of Tongeren, near the Dutch border, on July 28. The witness says the girl was with a couple - a Dutch man and an English-speaking woman - who were acting strangely and not like "normal parents".
Saturday August 4: Police launch a second search of Robert Murat's house. No new evidence is found.
Monday August 6: A Portuguese newspaper reports that British sniffer dogs have found traces of blood on a wall in the apartment where Madeleine went missing. Detectives now believe it is most likely that Madeleine is dead, having been killed accidentally, a Portuguese paper, the Jornal de Noticias, claims.
Thursday August 9: Murat's lawyer criticises the McCanns' "strange" behaviour in leaving Madeleine alone on the night she vanished. Francisco Pagarete also claims people in Praia da Luz want "these bloody McCanns" to return home. The McCanns insist they will not be "bullied" into leaving Portugal.
Saturday August 11: On the 100th day of Madeleine's disappearance, police acknowledge publicly for the first time that Madeleine could be dead. Sousa tells the BBC that new evidence has given "intensity" to the theory that she was killed. He says the parents are not considered suspects.
Sunday August 12: Kate McCann tells Woman's Own magazine that she would rather know her daughter was dead than live in limbo forever.
Wednesday August 15: Blood traces found in the bedroom where Madeleine was sleeping the night she was snatched were not hers, the Times reports. Forensic results show the blood came from a man, it adds.
Tuesday August 21: Two women report seeing a youngster matching Madeleine's description with a man at a petrol station near Cartagena, in the south-east of Spain.
Saturday August 25: Gerry McCann says he will be returning to work but insists his daughter may still be alive.
Friday August 31: The McCanns are to launch a libel action against a Portuguese newspaper that claimed police believe they killed their daughter, it emerges. The action will be against the Tal & Qual paper, based in Oporto.
Thursday September 6: Kate McCann arrives at a Portuguese police station to face further questioning by detectives.
Friday September 7: Kate McCann emerges from more than 10 hours of questioning. Later she is formally declared an arguido. Gerry McCann writes on his blog that the suggestion his wife was involved in Madeleine's disappearance is ludicrous.
Saturday September 8: Gerry McCann is also given arguido status after further police questioning.
Sunday September 9: The McCanns return to their home in Rothley, Leicestershire, with their twins, Sean and Amelie.
Monday September 10: Portuguese police sources suggest that DNA tests prove Madeleine's body had been in the boot of a car hired by her parents 25 days after she disappeared. Some DNA experts doubt the claims. The McCanns hire lawyers, including an extradition expert, from the London firm Kingsley Napley.
Tuesday September 11: A dossier outlining the police case against the McCanns is passed to the local prosecutor, Joao Cunha de Magalhaes, who then asks a judge to assess the information.
Sunday September 16: Sir Richard Branson reveals he is giving £100,000 to help cover the McCanns' legal costs.
Tuesday September 18: Clarence Mitchell, a former BBC reporter, confirms he has resigned as the head of the government's media monitoring unit to become the spokesman for the McCann family. His salary is paid by a Cheshire businessman, Brian Kennedy.
Wednesday September 19: The Evora district attorney general, Luis Bilro Verao, rules there is not enough evidence to justify further questioning of the McCanns about the disappearance of their daughter.
Tuesday September 26: The McCanns express caution after the publication of a photograph of a woman carrying a girl bearing a resemblance to their daughter. The picture was taken in northern Morocco by a Spanish tourist on August 31.
Thursday October 4: The second in command in the Portuguese inquiry, Chief Inspector Tavares Almeida, requests an extended leave of absence. The news comes two days after the police chief, Goncalo Amaral, was removed from the case and demoted for criticising British police involvement in the investigation.
Monday October 8: Paulo Rebelo, a deputy national director in the Portuguese police, is placed in charge of the investigation. It emerges that Almeida is among three officers being investigated over allegations of torture in a seven-year-old case. Amaral is also under investigation, accused of concealing evidence relating to an alleged beating of the mother of another disappeared child.
Thursday October 25: The McCanns hire a Spanish detective agency to run a 24-hour confidential telephone line in the hope that new information may yet be forthcoming. It is targeted at Spain, Portugal and Morocco, countries they believe may hold leads about Madeleine.
Tuesday October 30: The McCanns use part of the £1m fund set up to help find Madeleine to make two mortgage payments on their home in Leicestershire.
Thursday November 1: Gerry McCann returns to work, almost six months after his daughter went missing.
Friday November 16: Jane Tanner, one of the McCann family's closest friends and part of the so-called Tapas Seven, says she saw a man carrying a sleeping child away from the holiday apartments 45 minutes before Kate McCann discovered her daughter was missing.
Thursday November 29: Portuguese forensic experts meet their British counterparts to discuss DNA samples taken in the inquiry.
Tuesday January 8 2008: Clarence Mitchell, the McCanns' spokesman, says the family spoke to the entertainment and media company IMG before Christmas about turning the story of Madeleine's disappearance into a film. The talks were held amid concern that £1.2m fund dedicated to finding the four-year-old was rapidly running out. Gerry McCann says nothing was agreed to.
Sunday February 3: A Portuguese police chief, Alípio Ribeiro, says detectives were too hasty in making the McCanns suspects
Sunday February 10: Portuguese police say they have no evidence against the couple.
Wednesday February 13: Portuguese authorities say the search for Madeleine is winding down, more than nine months after she vanished.
Thursday March 13: The Daily Express scales back its Madeleine coverage after the threat of legal action from the McCanns over what their spokesman describes as a series of "wildly and grossly defamatory" articles.
Wednesday March 19: The Express and the Daily Star carry unprecedented front-page apologies for publishing more than 100 articles on the disappearance of Madeleine, some of which suggested her parents were involved in her death. The papers pay £550,000 in damages.
Monday April 7: Portuguese police, headed by Rebelo, arrive in the UK to be present as Leicestershire Constabulary officers begin interviewing the Tapas Seven.
Tuesday April 8: The McCanns are reported to be considering returning to Portugal to stage a reconstruction of the events surrounding the disappearance of their daughter.
-----------------------------------------------------------------quote:The Judiciary Police wants to have in Portugal, in the next month, Kate and Gerry McCann, the British couple whose three-year-old daughter disappeared from Praia da Luz, Algarve. The objective of the Portuguese investigators is to try, with a re-enactment of the night on the 3rd of May in the location of the crime, to understand the various contradictions of the statements given by the last persons who saw Maddie alive. In this group, there are seven friends who were accompanying the McCanns in the dinner of the Tapas Bar, when the alarm of the disappearance of the girl was given.
Clarence Mitchell, the press adviser of the family, confirmed yesterday the PJ’s request, but did not reveal dates, or details of the re-enactment. He was not clear on the possibility of the McCanns returning, leaving in the 'air the hypothesis' that the couple would accept willingly the diligence if they stopped being arguidos.
Other of the wishes of the McCanns to agree to the participation in the reconstitution would be that the same is subjected to a TV broadcast. Something that is unthinkable in the light of the legal Portuguese system, where the process is kept under the secrecy of Justice. Police sources said to the CM that the shelving of the suspicions against the parents of the child are not predictable before the end of the inquiry. Gerry, Kate or other of the English friends who spent holidays in Luz are not obliged to return, unless, if there are strong signs of the practice of a crime, which would lead to international warrants to be issued.
IMPORTANT WITNESSES
The day of yesterday was important for the PJ. They cross-examined again Jane Tanner and Russell O'Brien, the couple that had the biggest contradictions in the statements given in the last months. The PJ was intending to know exactly where Jane affirmed to have seen Maddie's kidnapper and how she managed to describe him after several months, although she did not do it on the days that followed the girl’s disappearance. Another doubt was how it was possible for her to see a man carrying a child in front of the apartment exactly at the same hour while Gerry was standing just a few meters away. And why Maddie’s father and a friend that were talking in that place did not see the same stranger with the girl.
As for Russell, the objective is to explain his goings to the bedroom where his daughters were sleeping, during the dinner. The Englishman was the one who stayed away longer from the table of the restaurant. He said what one of the daughters had vomited while she was sleeping, but there was no request to change dirty bed sheets.
SPECTACLE AT THE POLICE DOOR
The police display yesterday was enormous, during the whole morning and afternoon, near the installations of the police of Leicester. Dozens of photographers concentrated near the gates and tried to register the entries of the main protagonists: three elements of the PJ (Paulo Rebelo on the right, in the photo from above, accompanied by his team of inspectors) and the couple Jane Tanner and Russell O'Brien.
HIGH SECURITY ON THE POLICE STATION
The headquarters of the Leicester Police - where the interrogations took place - is surrounded by great measures of security. Nobody goes through the gate without obtaining a prior authorization.
MADDIE'S MOTHER AT HOME
Kate McCann came yesterday at the door of house. Only to close the door, furious, while noticing the presence of Portuguese journalists. Her friend wrote down the license plate of the car of the CM and phoned to the spokesman of the couple, Clarence Mitchell.
TEAM WITH AGITATED DAY
The three elements of the Judiciary Police which will, until next Friday, accompany the interrogations to the friends of the McCanns went out early from the Ramada Hotel, where they are staying. Before 09h00 a car of the Leicester police stopped at the Hotel's main entry and took the investigators even to headquarters. They entered in the headquarters in great speed and followed up to a building which was not possible for the journalists to see. There, they accompanied the investigations, which were made by the local police. They could not ask questions directly to the witnesses, but they where allowed to make suggestions.
The rogatory letter was sufficiently to authorize new questions and even to request new diligences. What can still be done till next Friday
'UNTOUCHABLE' IMAGE OF KATE E GERRY
The neighbourhood is peaceful. Equal to others which fill the small city of Rothley, where several practically equal dwellings stand out. In the street that gives access to the house - the McCanns House is the last one of the village and can be distinguished by the toys that are kept near one of the windows – there are almost no signs of life.
Two cars are at the door and Kate and Gerry prepared their trip to Brussels, set for tomorrow, with the couple travelling in a flight expected to be in the end of the afternoon and with a departure of an airport of London.
A little time has passed since the lunch hour when, the door opens and Kate comes to the entry. She says goodbye to a friend but the presence of the journalists of the CM hastens the farewell. Kate closes the door, remains hidden and Englishman that had gone out from the house stops in front of the car rented by the CM. Ostensibly, taking the number of the license plate and, by phone, he informs Clarence Mitchell, the adviser of the McCanns, that there are journalists at the door of the couple - a break of the compromise taken by the generality of the journalists, who accepted rules imposed by the McCanns and guided visits of the couple for photographic sessions. The CM does not accept compromises of this type.
When the incident ended - with the exit of the journalists of the CM-, the city seems to have forgotten Maddie.
DETAILS
HOTEL CHANGES RULES
The stay of the team of the Judiciary Police of Portimão in the Ramada Hotel, in Leicester, altered the internal rules of that unity. The bar, which was usually open not for guests until 01h00, now closes at 23h00.
PACIFIC FAMILIARITY
Portuguese journalists and police are put up in the same hotel, in the centre of the city of Leicester. The familiarity between all is appeasing, but the silence is maintained. Paulo Rebelo the PJ‘s coordinator and responsible for the department of Portimão, goes on repeating to the journalists that he does not give any statements.
CHANGE OF COURSE
At the same hour in that several of journalists were concentrated at the door of the police of Leicester to register the arrival of Jane Tanner and Russell O’Brien, to be questioned, Clarence Mitchell, the spokesman of the McCann, was calling the reporters for a press conference at 20 kilometres of distance. The dash was general.
50 WITNESSES
The lawyers of the couple McCann presented a list to the police of more than 50 persons, besides the group of friends that spent holidays with them in Praia da Luz, to be heard in England. They are close persons of the couple, defence witnesses.
FRIENDS WITHOUT LAWYERS
As they are cross-examined in the capacity of witnesses, all the friends of the McCanns have no use for the lawyers' presence.
CRUCIAL WITNESSES
The most important evidences are those of Jane and Russell, the first ones being heard because they assume total priority for the Judiciary Police.
EMPTY MEMORIAL
In Rothley, the memorial to the dead in the world wars, where were the most varied objects put in memory of the child, has nothing now.
SILENCE RULES
In the commercial establishments nobody wants to talk about the child, keeping some distance of the motives of a disappearance that ran throughout the World. Source: Correio da Manhã
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