Hoi!quote:Op donderdag 1 mei 2008 11:27 schreef Suko het volgende:
McCanns talk to BBC, 01 May 2008
Click link here to watch
01 May 2008
09:30
http://www.anorak.co.uk/tabloids/183494.htmlquote:Madeleine McCann: No Change, A Tourist Site And Entertainment
MADDIE WATCH - Anorak’s at-a-glance guide to press coverage of Madeleine McCann
THE GUARDIAN: “Last night’s TV: Madeleine, One Year On: Campaign for Change”
It’s difficult to keep the visuals stimulating, too. We saw the McCanns at home in Leicestershire; Kate and Jerry talking on the sofa. But you can’t have two hours of sofa, so we joined them in a lot of taxis - in Portugal, London, Washington. And there were plenty of lingering tree shots - leafless, winter trees (this is a sad story, after all). And a flying heron … eh, what’s that about? Maybe the heron is an aguido, too. Does Sir Trevor know?
DAILY MAIL: “Madeleine holiday apartment becomes ’sick tourist attraction’ one year on from her disappearance”
Coachloads of journalists arrive every day. It’s sick.
DAILY MIRROR: “Tourists posing for pictures at McCann tragedy spots”
Pensioner Pamela Fenn, who lives above the McCanns’ holiday apartment, said: “It’s sick.
“They stand outside and then have photographs taken with their children.”
A source close to the McCanns said yesterday: “It’s disgraceful.”
It’s not as if the disappearance of a missing child is entertaining.
The floodlights at Premiership club Everton will be switched on this Saturday to mark the anniversary in a campaign called Light The Way Home.
LIVERPOOL ECHO: “Madeleine McCann: Family prepare for first anniversary of her disappearance”
People around the world are being urged to light a candle, shine a torch or turn on a porch lamp on Saturday night as a gesture of support for Madeleine’s family and friends.
A lighter held in the air?
Robert Murat, the third arguido in the case, is intending to maintain a low profile and will probably stay away from Praia da Luz on Saturday.
He said: “The anniversary is for a little girl who went missing - Madeleine.
“The anniversary is not about us, the McCanns, the PJ (Portuguese detectives) or anything else but a little girl going missing.”
THE TIMES: “Madeleine, One Year On: Campaign for Change; Escape from Alcatraz: The True Story”
Stefanie Marsh: Why must television do compassion? Why, when faced with a captive audience, a prime-time slot and a story that could, if they’d let it, tell itself, must television turn to mush and mutate into a series of treacly Hallmark bereavement cards?…
At one point Gerry McCann admits that his “wife is carrying on in a quasi-real existence”. What she is really doing is falling apart, but too much gloop from the director turned the McCanns’ terrible situation into a guilt trip that made me want to watch The Apprentice instead.
THE INDEPENDENT: “Last Night’s TV: Madeleine, One Year On: Campaign for Change ITV1″
“You can’t always blame the parents,” says Thomas Stucliffe:
They still get a lot of letters, the McCanns, sorting them out into boxes marked “well-wishers”, “ideas”, “psychics” and “nutty”. Incredibly, they also need a box marked “nasty” for messages such as the one that Gerry read out at the beginning of the film. “How can you use money given by poor people in good faith to pay your mortgage on your mansion? You fucking thieving bastards. Your brat is dead because of your drunken arrogance. Shame on you. I curse you and your family to suffer forever. Cursed Christmas. If you had any shame, you would accept full responsibility for your daughter’s disappearance and give all the money back. You are scum.” This heart-warming expression of support had been written inside a Christmas card. The Daily Express, by contrast, chose to print its hate mail on its own front page, confident that there were enough readers out there who would prefer infanticide to unresolved mystery – or to no McCann story at all. And all the time, the McCanns themselves live a life horribly suspended between what might have been and what could happen next, between “if only” and “maybe”.
http://www.thesun.co.uk/s(...)e/article1106514.ecequote:Maddie: Special report part 3By ANTONELLA LAZZERI
Published: 30 Apr 2008
A TEARFUL Kate McCann talks tonight about how she is tormented by "if onlys" over the disappearance of Maddie.
An emotional Kate, 40, reveals for the first time how she and husband Gerry had planned to have a family dinner on the night their daughter vanished.
But a last-minute change of plan led them to leave her and her twin sister and brother alone in their holiday apartment in Portugal.
In an extraordinary ITV1 documentary, made to mark the anniversary of Maddie’s disappearance, Kate and husband Gerry, 39, speak as never before about that fateful night.
HER face crumpled in despair, tears streaming down, Kate McCann lays bare her utter grief at being separated from her daughter.
Speaking as never before, Kate says she cannot believe it has been a year since Maddie went missing.
And she tells how seeing the little girl’s best friend in their home village makes her think about how much Maddie must have changed in those long 12 months.
Her voice close to breaking, she says: "I see Madeleine’s best friend from time to time.
"I can’t help but wonder what Madeleine would be like.
"Would she be that much taller? Is her hair as long as that? Would she be writing her name too?"
Always referring to Maddie, who is five in May, in the present tense, she describes her as "very loving. She’s a very bright little girl.
"I had days when I’d go to a cafe with Madeleine and we’d go shopping together and she’d say, ‘Oh mummy, I like that top,’ or ‘Oh, I love your earrings, mummy’.
"She’s good company, she’s like my — you know, she’s like a little buddy to me."
In tonight’s ITV1 documentary, Madeleine, One Year On: Campaign For Change, the McCanns are seen sitting down to a happy family meal while three-year-old twins Sean and Amelie chatter away excitedly.
Later, Kate tells how, when she first returned home from Portugal, she couldn’t bear "everyday things".
She says: "I didn’t cook a meal — just couldn’t do it. I resented things like that because it was taking me away from Madeleine.
"How can I hang up washing when my daughter’s not here?"
Poignantly, she adds: "With three kids, there’s always lots of washing," and says that having to get up to deal with the twins helps her cope with Maddie being missing.
She points out: "They need a happy normal life."
Talking about life without Maddie, who he describes as "endless joy", dad Gerry says it is "a purgatory-type existence. We are kind of between something real and never finding out." He adds sadly: "Our little girl wasn’t even four and is now nearly five. She’s the victim and people should not forget that."
Much of tonight’s documentary was filmed at the McCanns’ home in Rothley, Leicestershire.
Poignantly, as the TV programme shows, there are reminders of Madeleine everywhere.
Photos of her are plastered on the fridge, drawings she did at nursery are stuck to kitchen units and her name is spelt out in wooden letters on a mantelpiece.
The twins are seen noisily playing in a playroom which is littered with Maddie’s things, including a toy kitchen and pink pram.
Their gleeful laughter fills the house, and, watching them play, Kate smiles at the memory of Maddie joining in the fun.
Kate says: "She was great with Sean and Amelie.
"Even when they were born, you know she just stepped into the role really well, considering she was only 20 months when they were born, and she wanted to be involved and help. As they got a little bit older, because the age difference was so close, they just played so well together."
Her voice trailing away as she wipes away tears, Kate adds: "And it was lovely seeing them together and that’s one thing that I struggle with — imagining how they would be now."
Talking about the night when Maddie went missing Kate tells for the first time how she and husband Gerry had planned to dine with the children.
She says: "We were all going to go up to the Millennium restaurant again. That was with the kids, which is what we did the first night.
"It didn’t open till half past six in the evening and our kids usually go to bed around seven, so they were really tired."
Talking about why they had changed their minds, she says that, on the first visit, "we ended up trying to carry three of them between two and we decided we couldn’t do that, really.
"It was just because the walk was so long and we didn’t have a buggy and the kids were tired by that time."
So, instead, the McCanns decided to dine at a tapas bar just across from their holiday apartment. They left the kids alone, checking on them every 20 minutes.
Talking about the much-criticised decision to leave her children alone, Kate says: "I think if there’d even been one second when someone had said, ‘Do you think it’s going to be OK?’, it wouldn’t have happened.
"I mean, there’s absolutely no way, if I’d have had the slightest inkling that there was risk involved there, that I’d have done it."
Gerry adds: "It was so close. It didn’t feel that different to dining out in the back garden."
Kate now admits that she is tormented by the fact they left their children alone.
And she also feels guilty that they did not question Maddie further about a curious remark she made on the morning of the day she went missing.
She says the little girl had asked her, "Mummy, where were you last night when me and Sean were crying?"
The McCanns are convinced now that their daughter may have been woken up by an intruder for her to have said what she did the next morning.
Wringing her hands, Kate says: "You know, I’ve persecuted myself over and over again about that statement because you think, why didn’t I kind of just hold her and say, ‘What do you mean? What do you mean you woke up?’
"I do go back and it does upset you and you think, why didn’t I say, ‘Why did you cry?’ — and why didn’t we go back to the Millennium?"
Breaking down in tears, she adds: "Then, as Gerry said, there is the guilt you feel for not being there and giving someone that opportunity.
"But then I just have to kind of reel myself in and think, ‘I know how much I love Madeleine and I have no doubt that Madeleine knows how much I love her’."
It was Kate’s turn to check on the children — at around 10pm — when she discovered that Maddie had vanished.
She breaks down again as she recalls that moment, adding: "I just remember saying, ‘Not Madeleine, not Madeleine, not Madeleine’ — and I remember saying that over and over again."
Kate admits she "just feared the worst at the beginning".
She says: "It was really cold. I knew what pyjamas she had on and I just thought she’s going to be freezing.
"And it was dark, and every minute seemed like an hour and, obviously, we were up all night and just waited for that first bit of light about six o’clock in the morning."
Gerry says: "Then we just went out searching, the two of us, at daylight. We were saying over and over again, ‘Just let her be found, let her be found’.
"It felt like you’re in the middle of a horror movie, really, a nightmare."
At times during the documentary the couple’s tears turn to anger at the way the Portuguese police have handled their daughter’s disappearance.
Talking about the moment she learnt she and Gerry had been made arguidos — official suspects — Kate says: "As soon as I realised the story, or theory, was that Madeleine was dead and that we’d been involved somehow, it just hit home.
"They haven’t been looking for Madeleine. I was angry, you know. And I thought she deserves so much better than that, and I thought I’m not going to sit here and allow this.
"I felt almost invincible at that point. I just thought my children deserve that — Madeleine deserves that.
"Someone has to be fighting for Madeleine.
"When I was going in to become an arguido I felt angry. I wasn’t scared. I felt like I was going to fight the world, to be honest.
"My daughter was worth more than all that and I would do whatever it took to fight for justice and truth."
For Kate and Gerry the picture of a happy three-year-old clutching a bundle of tennis balls evokes a carefree time before they became household names.
Speaking in the documentary about the now-famous photograph, Kate says: "Gerry loves that photo.
"As part of the kids’ club, they did mini-tennis and she really enjoyed it."
Gerry smiles and adds: "One of the tasks was to gather all the balls up and she’d obviously managed to get three in and she turned round to Kate and she’s like, ‘Look, I’ve got them all’."
He also speaks about the moment the last known picture of Madeleine was taken.
It shows her sitting alongside her father and her younger brother Sean, dangling their feet in the swimming pool, just seven hours before her disappearance.
Gerry says: "She was a little person becoming independent and a piece of just endless joy."
Apart from the twins, the couple have been kept going in recent months by their involvement in the US-style Amber Alert system to keep children safe.
They have recently been to Brussels to ask the European Parliament to adopt a similar scheme across Europe.
At one stage in the documentary they are seen meeting Ed Smart in America.
His daughter Elizabeth was found alive eight months after she was abducted.
He tells the McCanns firmly: "Miracles do happen."
As the first anniversary of Maddie’s disappearance dawns, Kate admits that she cannot imagine living with never knowing what happened to her daughter.
And she says firmly that she and Gerry will never give up searching for her.
At one stage she is seen reading a story in The Sun about a sighting of Maddie in France.
She says: "There’s always that little bit of hope — thinking, ‘Where is she?’ and ‘Is it ever going to be one of those sightings that’s the real thing?’ "
Her voice trembling, Kate says at the end of the documentary: "She’s out there. We’ve just got to find her.
"It doesn’t feel like a year since I saw Madeleine.
"She’s just so much, very much still there and she doesn’t seem so far away.
"It feels like she’s still with me in some way and I’ve never felt like I won’t see her again."
Goh, wat zou de PJ van hen vinden?quote:The parents of missing four-year-old Madeleine McCann have expressed their frustration with Portuguese police investigating their daughter's disappearance.
Speaking to the BBC before the imminent anniversary of Madeleine's abduction on May 3rd last year, the McCanns underlined their determination to continue appealing for information about their daughter.
"We'll never give up on Madeleine. I want Madeleine back. We need to find Madeleine. That's what keeps us going," Kate McCann explained.
She and her husband remain official suspects in the case but have expressed concern over the lack of contact between Portuguese police and themselves.
"We'd very much like to know exactly what has been done, what hasn't been done, who's been eliminated and on what grounds," Gerry McCann said.
"I think the key thing is… a horrific crime against a young child," Mrs McCann added.
"I think we need to focus on that. Madeleine is still missing and a hideous crime has been committed. And that person is still out there."
The McCanns dismissed speculation that their daughter may have disappeared without being abducted, but said they were unable to reveal further details because of "judicial secrecy" rules.
"We know more than a lot of people than are actually standing up there giving opinions," Mrs McCann added.
"We know more facts and a lot of people are just speculating."
Madeleine disappeared from the apartment where the McCanns were staying on a family holiday in the resort of Praia da Luz in the Algarve.
Mogge...middag Kahaarin.quote:Op donderdag 1 mei 2008 12:06 schreef kahaarin het volgende:
Dit is de 1-year-on docu van 'The Sun'
http://extras.thesun.co.uk/madeleine/1_year_on/
Strange, geen woord over het DNA in de auto en de tegenstrijdige recentelijk ingetrokken verklaringen van Jane Tanner, heel vaag en pro McCann allemaal, misschien bang voor nog meer schadeclaims.![]()
Oh en Suko, die link werkt niet bij mij.![]()
Een docu over vermissingen, daar zullen de McCanns ook wel een platform in krijgen ben ik bang.quote:Op donderdag 1 mei 2008 12:53 schreef Suko het volgende:
[..]
Mogge...middag Kahaarin.Nee, link werkt bij mij ook niet, moet je waarschijnlijk die stomme player van de BBC installeren > is alleen voor de UK, zal wel snel op Youtube te zien zijn, als ik (of iemand anders) het zie meld ik 't wel ff. Jeeeeeez, ik ben het ook wel goed zat eigenlijk en wat te denken van morgenochtend, Ned tijd 10.00u:
Missing Live
Fri 2 May, 9:15 am - 10:00 am 45mins BBC1
Series following the work of the police and the charity Missing People as they search for just some of the 200,000 people who disappear every year. Presented by Louise Minchin and Rav Wilding. "
Veel succes voor die persoon, hopelijk kan hij/zij goed slapen 's nachts.quote:http://www.missingpeople.org.uk/ dikke maatjes van de McConns. Ze zijn trouwens op zoek naar een PR-manager en een Director of Fundraising & Marketing... Bizz is boomingOja, Richard Branson is één van de Vice Patrons.
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Doe maar, misschien een beetje leesvoer.....quote:Er is zoveel te melden maar nu even niet...Of er moeten nieuwe ontwikkelingen komen, ik vrees van niet.
(ergens kan het ook een enorrme hoax zijn, heb er al wat over gelezen, gek genoeg zijn die topics woei/weg, heb het wel bewaard, mogelijk donder ik dat verhaal nog eens hier in dit topic....
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GMTA!quote:En de PJ heeft hopelijk ook een wider agenda, mét bewijzen, reken maar dat ook alles in Portugal wordt bekeken en in het dossier wordt toegevoegd. Het wachten is op antwoorden van de McConns, dát is wat de PJ denkt Kahaarin.![]()
Maar goed, alweer komt dat Oostenrijkse drama in hun verhaal, Sky: "The cases of Elisabeth Fritzl and Natasha Kampusch in Austria have also given them hope that Madeleine could be alive - and they can even imagine her growing up in a different place, surrounded by different people, and simply adjusting to her new situation."quote:Op donderdag 1 mei 2008 13:43 schreef kahaarin het volgende:
[..]
Een docu over vermissingen, daar zullen de McCanns ook wel een platform in krijgen ben ik bang.![]()
[..]
Veel succes voor die persoon, hopelijk kan hij/zij goed slapen 's nachts.![]()
[..]
Ships, die organisatie van Missing People is al vanaf maandag elke dag op op de BBC, anyway, die 2 genoemde vacatures voor Missing People (PR-manager en een Director of Fundraising & Marketing)....ik kom maar niet op 2 voor de hand liggende namen....het is zo toevallig!![]()
quote:Op donderdag 1 mei 2008 19:21 schreef Suko het volgende:
Tip: morgenavond, dus vrijdagvond 2 mei, op RTL4, de door hen zelf gemaakte docu:
Madeleine McCann: Een jaar verder 22.25u - 00.25u
"Waarin de ouders van de sinds 3 mei 2007 vermiste Britse peuter Madeleine McCann worden gevolgd. Sinds de toen driejarige Maddie McCann spoorloos verdween uit het vakantieappartement in het Portugese Praia da Luz, hebben ouders Gerry en Kate onafgebroken aandacht gevraagd voor deze zaak, waarin ze zelf ook verdachten werden. Hoe controversieel de feiten ook zijn, het allerbelangrijkst is dat Maddie, inmiddels een jaar na dato, nog altijd wordt vermist en moet worden gevonden."
Ik zag het net op Boulevard, onderwerp werd natuurlijk kritiekloos behandeld maar dat is niet zo verwonderlijk, het leeft niet zo erg hier dus achtergronden zijn vrijwel onbekend. Zakdoeken bij de hand want het wordt héél erg zielig. Ik geloof gerust dat met name Kate het moeilijk had en nog heeft maar ik geloof ook dat ze wetenschap hebben wat er met Madeleine is gebeurd en inmiddels doorgewinterde mediarakkers zijn geworden...zet argusogen op!![]()
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Het échte nieuws/info is te lezen op o.a. het Three Arguidos Forum + Joana Morais + mccannfiles.
Yeah, wederom schone konten halen....quote:Op donderdag 1 mei 2008 19:52 schreef kahaarin het volgende:
[..]
Tissues paraat, ik wacht 'met spanning' op de balkonscenes.......
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Verder, same old, same old dus, ach ja, geen nieuws dan maken we nieuws is het devies van team McCann.
Die zijn nu al wel blinkend denk ik, tjonge ik ben dat interview aan het luisteren, die mensen hebben dus daadwerkelijk het lef om anderen te vertellen wat ze moeten doen om hun kinderen veilig te houden.....quote:
Bedankt voor de link, eens lezen hoe men het daar beleeft!quote:Maar goed, belofte maakt schuld, hier is in twee delen op youtube het BBC-breakfast interview van vanmorgen:
Deel 1: Kate and Gerry McCann interviewed - BBC Breakfast May 1 2008
Deel 2: Kate and Gerry McCann interviewed - BBC Breakfast May 1 2008
Gevonden op dit forum met nog meer links.
Yep, en voorlopig blijft dat nog wel zo, zolang de McCanns weigeren mee te werken/vragen te beantwoorden, zolang de Britse Labour-overheid het onderzoek (het inzien van de Rogatory Letters zodat de vragen tijdens het verhoren al bekend waren bij de Tapas 7) maaaaanden heeft vertraagd en de resultaten (denk aan de DNA-uitslagen) in een bureaula laat lggen, tot zolang hebben de McCanns ruim baan om (zoals Kahaarin dat zo treffend beschrijft) hun konten schoon te vegen en te houden, totdat de glans verdwijnt, totdat van al die glamour niets meer over blijft en de blaren zichtbaar worden. Columnist Jon Gaunt is on a mission naar het schijnt, sommige stukjes vind ik discutabel maar vooruit, it's a start.quote:Op donderdag 1 mei 2008 23:58 schreef Tmaatje het volgende:
OMG nog meer "kijk ons arme ouders eens bezorgt zijn repetoire??"
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------quote:JON GAUNT - Sun Columnist
Published: 02 May 2008 (published online 01 May 2008)
Come off TV, Kate and Gerry, your time is up The Sun
IT must be just me, but the Maddie documentary left me feeling less sympathetic to Gerry and Kate than I was before. It was a two-hour bore-fest with a centre softer than a marshmallow. And my God, did the background music get on your nerves too?
There was no real probe into why they chose to leave their three children home alone. I accept that their proposal for an amber alert system is a great idea and should be implemented right across Europe.
However, I couldn’t believe their bleating over the fact that their campaign was bumped off the front pages by the revelation that Maddie had asked why Mummy hadn’t come to their room the night before when she was crying.
This was, at best, naive. Of course a revelation like this will go straight to the top of the news agenda. The question remains: Why didn’t Kate and Gerry talk to us about this earlier?
Booze
Again let me state, I don’t know whether they are involved in Maddie’s disappearance — only a court can discover the truth — but I believe they are guilty of neglect. What was all that guff about not having a buggy as a reason for leaving the kids alone in the room?
What was that nonsense about thinking there was a listening service? After a few days they must have realised that no such service was available? Even if they didn’t realise this, surely when Maddie talked about crying on the very day she was abducted they should never have chosen to go out on the booze again.
I interviewed Emma Loach, the director of this film, on my radio show on Wednesday and she clearly illustrated where her sympathies lay when she told me she too had left her three-year-old and five-year-old alone in a hotel room while she went off and had dinner.
Her pathetic excuse for this child neglect was that it was better to do this than have the kids be irritable the next day. erry and Kate said on GMTV yesterday that there are different ways to parent.
They are WRONG.
There is only way and that is to always put your kids first. People like Loach and the McCanns clearly don’t understand that when you have kids your priorities have to change, you are no longer a singleton or a couple and you cannot act as if you are.
Your first responsibility is the safety and comfort of your children.
This programme left me with even more questions than answers and just confirmed to me that the spinning and propaganda on both sides has to stop. I agree with the man who brought the Bulger killers to justice, Albert Kirby, who said on my show that the McCanns’ time would be better spent going back to Portugal and helping the police with the reconstruction rather than touring TV studios.
The McCanns must return and do the reconstruction. Then the Portuguese police need to charge them or release them from their suspect status. But please, most of all, can all the main players in this sad saga remember it is not about you and your suffering but the plight of an innocent four-year-old. Bron
quote:"It is thought to be the worst projected share for Labour in 40 years." http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/7372860.stm
I am reminded of what Churchill said to Neville Chamberlain after Munich: "You had a choice between war and dishonour. You chose dishonour and will have war."
Gordon Brown, honourable sir: I know you did not initiate the government's involvement in the McCann mess; you were handed it by Tony Blair. But once you became Prime Minister you, too, had a choice - between dishonour and embarassment. You chose dishonour, in my opinion, and before this is over, you will surely have your fill of embarassment as well.
Tonight was just the beginning.
Ik vond het werelds, dat verlies van Labour!quote:Op vrijdag 2 mei 2008 14:00 schreef kahaarin het volgende:Ergens bijna sneu, verkiezingen verloren, hun media offensief pakt niet uit zoals ze zouden willen en niemand gelooft meer dat ze geen dubbele agenda hebben.
Als het niet ging om een vermist meisje zou je er om kunnen lachen.
En verder dus geen nieuws behalve de interviews, nergens, geen spoor van Maddy, geen enkel geluid van enige progressie.
Ze hebben imho alles al gezegd in hun interviews, wat willen ze nu nog verklaren dan?quote:Op vrijdag 2 mei 2008 17:53 schreef Suko het volgende:
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Ik vond het werelds, dat verlies van Labour!Nee helaas, en dat spoor zal misschien nooit worden gevonden. De Mccanns gaan morgen niet naar de kerkdienst in Praia da Luz, broer John Mccann gaat: "They will be accompanied by Michael Wright, Kate's cousin. After the ceremony, in front of the church, familiar with Kate and Gerry have planned to speak to the media by reading a statement prepared by the head of the campaign, Clarence Mitchell."
Inderdaad, allemaal valse lucht, zouden ze niet doorhebben dat ze alleen maar wrevel opwekken zo? Er bestaat ook nog zoiets als overexposure.quote:Nee, De McCanns zijn veel te bang voor de PJ en de Luzjes aldaar, die hebben de buik allang al vol van dit mediacircus. Overigens hebben de McCanns deze dagen al 18 interviews gegeven, de US is nu aan de beurt, en dat nog buiten de optredens elke morgen in het programma Missing People van de BBC. Volgende week ook nog te zien, ik weet niet of ze daar dan weer zijn. Bron
Slimme truc, meteen iedereen die lastig is kunnen traceren via hun IP adres, maar daar kun je wel omheen, een gratis hotmail accountje in een internetcafe doet wonderen.quote:En verder kunnen mensen nu naar een anoniem emailafres mailen, de McCanns maakten dat vanmorgen bekend, zij doen het voorkomen alsof dat hetzelfde is als naar naar het nieuwe tel. nummer bellen, Metodo 3 dus. Maar pas op, als men mailt via de mail van de eigen provider dan is ook het ip-nummer bekend, je voelt 't al, zoals op 3arguido dit terecht aan de orde komt: "the email address is anonymous@findmadeleine.com BUT it doesn't mean your email is anonymous - your email address headers etc will be on record! it does appear to suggest that it's like an anonymous phone call but it's NOT." + "Do not let them collect your email address, particularly if it is one provided by your ISP."
Het advies is natuurlijk de politie te bellen zoals elk weldenkend mens zou doen: Leicester police; 0116 222 2222
Scotland Yard; 0207 230 1212
Ik heb het gelezen, jeetje wat een griezels, vaag dat die vrouw zo bedreigd wordt, hopelijk doet de politie iets met de aangifte.quote:Die enge supportgroep HTFM van de McCanns houden Fora en bloggers al geruime tijd behoorlijk bezig, alweer een voorbeeld is op het 3arguidoforum te lezen.
http://www.tvgids.nl/programmadetail/?ID=7071529quote:Op vrijdag 2 mei 2008 19:40 schreef Loohcs het volgende:
Was net ook een stukje bij één vandaag met onze eigen Jaap Jongbloed. Er werd niet aan de ouders getwijfeld en het leek wel of Jaap z'n tekst aan 't oplezen was, want hij keek regelmatig met een schuin oog naar een papier op z'n bureau.
Ik ben hier wel benieuwd naar, wat betreft Jaap Jongbloed, ik denk dat men als de dood is voor claims van de McCanns, dit is imho gewoon een onderdeel van hun recente charme offensief in de media, of we het nu leuk vinden of niet, er is nog geen zinnig woord te zeggen over het hoe en wat, het waarom is wel duidelijk, de ouders hebben het degene die Maddy heeft meegenomen errug makkelijk gemaakt door de deur open te laten.quote:Madeleine McCann: Een jaar verderDocumentaire
waarin de ouders van de sinds 3 mei 2007 vermiste Britse peuter Madeleine McCann worden gevolgd. Sinds de toen driejarige Maddie McCann spoorloos verdween uit het vakantieappartement in het Portugese Praia da Luz, hebben ouders Gerry en Kate onafgebroken aandacht gevraagd voor deze zaak, waarin ze zelf ook verdachten werden. Hoe controversieel de feiten ook zijn, het allerbelangrijkst is dat Maddie, inmiddels een jaar na dato, nog altijd wordt vermist en moet worden gevonden.
RTL 4, 22:25 uur
quote:Police chief rejects McCanns' amber alert campaign The UK’s most senior officer responsible for missing children today ruled out Kate and Gerry McCann’s plea to introduce an “amber alert” system. Deputy Assistant Commissioner Richard Bryan insisted that there was no need to emulate the US system of immediate information broadcasts once children have been reported missing. The officer, who is the Association of Chief Police Officers head of missing people, said forces in England and Wales already operate an effective “child rescue alert”.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------quote:Senior UK officers said up to 700 child abductions are reported each year, the majority of which involve marriage break-ups.
They believe low-key techniques, such as studying CCTV, checking bank records and tracking mobile phones, can be more effective than public appeals. A child rescue alert can only be made when the missing child is aged under 16, and police believe he or she has been abducted and is in danger of serious harm.
On the occasions they have been used, one baby was found under a bed at home after it was missed in an initial search. In the second case, a child was reported abducted after the car it was strapped into was stolen by thieves. It was later found unharmed in the abandoned car. The third alert involved a report of an abduction made by a child witness where police eventually found no evidence any crime had taken place. Het heke artikel in The Times
http://edition.cnn.com/20(...)cann.year/index.htmlquote:LONDON, England (CNN) -- Madeleine McCann has become an icon for missing children, her parents said Friday on the eve of the anniversary of the British toddler's disappearance from a Portuguese holiday resort.
A faded photograph of Madeleine McCann on a church notice board near where she disappeared.
Gerry and Kate McCann have kept Madeleine's disappearence in the public eye.
"Madeleine does seem to have become iconic of missing children," Kate McCann told CNN in an interview as the couple launched a fresh appeal for information about Madeleine's whereabouts and vowed never to give up the search until she is found.
"We believe there is a very good chance Madeleine is out there," Gerry McCann said. "There is certainly no evidence to suggest otherwise and we are doing our best to find her. At the moment we've got a few pieces of a jigsaw and a huge gap and what we are trying to do is build that information."
The couple also reiterated their support for the introduction of a Europe-wide alert procedure for missing children similar to the "Amber alert" system in the United States, which advocates credit with cutting rates of child abduction.
"We are interested in making a world safer for children," Gerry McCann said. "This is something that could be implemented and it will save lives."
Madeleine, then age 3, disappeared from the family's holiday villa at the beach resort of Praia da Luz on the evening of May 3, 2007, as her parents dined in a nearby restaurant.
Police later released sketches of a scruffy, mustachioed man who witnesses claimed to have seen carrying a young girl matching Madeleine's description.
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International: +44 845 838 4699 "The chances of Madeleine being found are at least as good if not better than in those first few days," Kate McCann said. "We know she's been abducted by a man. Other than that we just don't know anything. There's a whole range of scenarios in which she could still be alive."
Since September the McCanns themselves have been considered formal suspects -- or "arguidos" -- under Portuguese law in the investigation into Madeleine's disappearance.
The couple was stunned and dismayed by the development, Kate McCann said.
"Our reaction was disbelief, first of all, and then devastation because suddenly they were looking at us -- and if they were looking at us then who was looking for Madeleine? Who was looking for my little girl? It was devastating," she said.
The couple's naming as formal suspects prompted a hostile backlash in some British newspapers. Gerry McCann reiterated that they have never been accused of having any involvement in their daughter's apparent abduction.
"Anyone can smear you and anyone can be smeared," he said. "But we have never been accused of anything and we are trying to look forward. What we are saying is that Madeleine is out there and we want to find her."
The couple, from Rothley, Leicestershire, describe the night of Madeleine's disappearance as a parent's "worst nightmare" and the "most horrific situation imaginable."
"Every parent can imagine it but they will probably never feel that desperation," said Gerry McCann. "Any parent knows that fleeting feeling in a park or in a supermarket: Where's my child? And then there's that terrible realization."
The McCanns say they are now trying to lead an "ordinary family life" amid the campaign to find Madeleine, and say their 3-year-old twins' routine of swimming lessons and nursery classes has proved a welcome distraction from the search.
The pair are still too young to comprehend their sister's disappearance and still include her in their games, Kate McCann says.
"They do lots of role playing with toys in which they still include Madeleine," said Kate McCann. "If she walked through the door, I think they would be like: 'Madeleine's back, let's go to the park!'"
But the couple admit that a normal life is impossible while Madeleine remains missing.
"The concept of saying, let's go out and have a nice meal even a year down the line that doesn't hold any appeal or enjoyment," said Gerry McCann. "We need to know everything and we will never give up."
"You have moments when you are exhausted and you think you can't do this anymore but it's a second, a moment," Kate McCann said. "Because you never give up. Who would give up on their own child?"
Vreemd, terwijl andere bronnen melden dat de DNA-resultaten nog steeds niet openbaar cq bekend zijn, of toch wel??? Ex-copper Beachy denkt (waar bovenstaand artikel ook vandaan komt): "We are not dealing with contamination of the samples, but the possibility, mostly academic, that someone with an identical genetic profile combined with all the others," affirmed a source within the process to CM."If Correia da Manha is reporting the state of the evidence correctly, this is a misunderstanding of the science. Unless Madeleine has an unknown identical twin somewhere, there is no one else on earth with a genetic profile identical to hers."quote:Correio da Manhã, 2 May 2008, 10h00 Tânia Laranjo
translation: Debk.
Blood marks the death
They aren't enough to condemn the McCanns. They are only miniscule vestiges, whose genetic profile is frighteningly close to Madeleine's. The definitive results are now in Portugal, as are the final analysis of the biological and synthetic residues sent to the National Institute of Legal Medicine (INML) headquartered in Coimbra.
For many investigators, the proof is sufficient, but the truth is that in court it could create doubt. And in a case like this, which also concerns the credibility of our authorities, all the care in the world is not enough.
The definitive exam results have been with PJ for some months and indicate a high degree of similarity between the blood in the McCann's car and that of Madeleine. The same comparisons were made with the vestiges detected in the apartment rented by the English [couple] and where the child, then three years old, disappeared without a trace.
One year later, the impasse in the investigation continues. Without a cadaver or confessions it will continue to be possible for the child's parents to create doubts [in court]. Not because of the quality of the vestiges, but because of the method used in their collection. "The vestiges were not visible to the naked eye and it was necessary to use the 'low copy number'. What that means is that genetic profiles were extracted from all the people that left vestiges in that place. We are not dealing with contamination of the samples, but the possibility, mostly academic, that someone with an identical genetic profile combined with all the others," affirmed a source within the process to CM.
In addition, Corte Real, responsible for the genetic analysis at INML, told CM that there are no perfect DNA matches. Without referring specifically to this case, the specialist reiterated that 99.99% results are valid, almost standalone, in paternity suits. "If we are talking about cases where various genetic profiles were collected then the results are lower [than 99.99%]."
"Maddie is missing" (Gerry and Kate McCann, Maddie's parents, to SIC TV)
- How has this past year been?
Kate: I spend the entire day with Sean and Amélie. It has been very difficult, but I continue to believe that Maddie is alive.
Gerry: It was by far the most difficult year. We continue to be motivated by the strong possibility that she is alive.
- Do your younger children continue to ask about their sister?
Kate: They talk about her every day. She is part of their lives. At times it is difficult, other times touching. She is part of their lives.
Gerry: I believe that if Maddie returned home today they would react normally ... they are very little, and don't yet ask questions. At this point, they just know that Maddie is missing.
Kate: We can only tell them the truth when we know it.
Gerry: They have the notion that they last saw Maddie in Portugal. They think that if they go back, they'll find their sister.
NOTES
18 Interviews
Yesterday, Maddie's parents gave 18 interviews to the media.
Message to the Abductor
"All we want is Madeleine back and you can free yourself of this situation," says Gerry.
The Apartment
In apartment 5a at the Ocean Club vestiges of blood were found, whose DNA is similar to Maddie's. One of the vestiges was behind the sofa.
The Car
The discovery of vestiges in the car rented after the disappearance mandated the about-face of the investigation. The exam results caused the parents to become arguidos.
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