Friday, 30 December 2016

McCanns' European Campaign - Morocco

The McCanns campaign reaches Morocco 


The McCanns are greeted at the National Observatory for Children's Rights by over 100 children


Morocco, 10 June 2007 - 12 June 2007

Date: 10 June 2007
Brief overview of events

Kate and Gerry attend morning mass in Praia da Luz.

Late in the afternoon they drive up to Lisbon to catch a flight to Casablanca, where embassy officials meet them at the start of their trip to Morocco.



Date: 11 June 2007
Brief overview of events

Kate and Gerry spend the day in Rabat meeting British ambassador Charles Gray, Morocco's most senior police officer Charqi Draiss, the Interior Minister Mohamed Benaissa as well as representatives from 3 child welfare groups, including Touche Pas Mes Enfants (Do Not Touch my Children), an organisation set up two years ago to tackle paedophilia.

As well as the meetings, the McCanns visited the National Observatory for Children's Rights. As they pulled up in the car there were about 150 children waving posters of Madeleine with the words 'All Moroccan Children Are With You Madeleine - Madeleine: Back Home'.

The McCanns also did a couple of interviews for ITV and Sky focussing on a change in the phase of the campaign. They confirmed that there would be a period of reflection before they decided on the best role for themselves.



Date: 12 June 2007
Brief overview of events

Kate and Gerry finish off their trip to Morocco with a private visit to the minister for religious affairs in the morning. 

They arrive back in Praia da Luz in the afternoon.

At night they go to church for prayers.




The McCanns arrive at Casablanca airport in Morocco




Parents fear they must return without Maddy    Telegraph

By Fiona Govan in Praia da Luz and Olga Craig
Published: 12:01AM BST 10 Jun 2007

The father of missing four-year-old Madeleine McCann has admitted for the first time that he and his family may have to return home to England from Portugal without their daughter.

Gerry McCann, 39, and his wife Kate, 38, have always insisted that to leave Praia da Luz in the Algarve, where Madeleine disappeared without trace on May 3, would be to abandon her.

But yesterday Mr McCann, a medical consultant from Rothley, in Leicestershire, said: "The time has come for a contingency plan."

Seated next to his wife in the flat on the Algarve where they have been staying with their two-year-old twins, Amelie and Sean, Mr McCann said: "We will not give up, but there will be a different way of doing it. I can see myself having to go back to the UK to meet with people, it is just more efficient to do things over there.

"It will be very, very hard. The last time I was back, I couldn't even go into the house. I found it hard enough going to Rothley."

Mrs McCann admitted she would prefer to stay in Portugal. "I feel very close to Madeleine here," she said. "She could actually be further away from here than she is from the UK but I feel emotionally close to her here. People have told me I could do the same, if not more, back in the UK, but I can't face leaving here."

The couple agreed, however, that they need a break. "We can't keep doing the same thing week after week. The coverage will dwindle away," Mr McCann said.

In the past week the McCanns have been stung by suggestions that they could somehow be involved in their daughter's disappearance - which they strongly deny - and that they are making too many public appearances.

"We don't like the limelight," Mr McCann stressed, "and would never have chosen to do all this, but we're driven by the fact that we think it is helping Madeleine."

Today the couple, whose "find Madeleine" fund is expected to exceed £1 million by the end of this week, will fly to Morocco on the last leg of their series of foreign visits aimed at raising awareness of her plight. In spite of their carefully orchestrated publicity campaign and tireless work to trace their daughter, there has been no sign of her.

The couple have chosen Morocco because of its proximity to Portugal and its reputation as a haven for paedophiles. Mr McCann said yesterday that his daughter's disappearance "might be linked to organised abuse of children".

Ferries leave each day from Tarifa in Spain, just across the border from Portugal, on the 35-minute crossing to Tangier in Morocco. The north African country has surfaced several times in the hunt for Madeleine, with reported sightings of a little girl in the company of a man with whom she appeared uncomfortable.

Earlier in the week the McCanns delayed travelling from Berlin to Amsterdam and made preliminary plans to return to England after a mobile call to police from an unknown Spanish-speaking man who claimed to know Madeleine's whereabouts. The SIM card of the mobile used was traced to Argentina but although Portuguese police took the lead very seriously, the trail seems to have gone cold.

The owners of the apartment rented by the McCanns and the scene of Madeleine's abduction while she slept, are expected to fly to the Algarve this week. They put the flat up for rent through the Mark Warner holiday company but it is now believed they are considering selling it.



 
Madeleine parents 'to take stock'    BBC News

Last Updated: Sunday, 10 June 2007, 05:12 GMT 06:12 UK

The parents of missing Madeleine McCann say they will spend the coming week reviewing the campaign to find her and allowing themselves time to grieve.

The couple have travelled across Europe in an effort to find Madeleine, four, who went missing in Portugal on 3 May.

But on their return to the Algarve on Tuesday from Morocco, Gerry and Kate McCann of Rothley, Leicestershire, say they will have a period of reflection.

Mr McCann, 39, said he did not want to hold back his emotions any more.

"There's been a lot of emotion in the last 10 days," he said.

"In the first few weeks when I slipped into dark moments of despair, I was finding it quite easy to emotionally switch a light back on, but I've been finding it increasingly difficult to do.

"More importantly, I don't want to do that any more. I want to be able to grieve and let those emotions out."

Media attention

The couple have travelled across Europe - including taking a trip to the Vatican City to make a personal appeal to the Pope - since their daughter disappeared from Praia da Luz, in the Algarve.

"We'll still meet with the Portuguese police as we have done fairly regularly and with the British police, but it is definitely going to be a period of reflection," Mr McCann said.

"We can't keep doing the same thing week after week. The [media] coverage will dwindle away. What we want to be sure of is that what we put our energy into is effective."

The couple will travel to the Moroccan capital Rabat later for a series of meetings and a news conference.

The visit to the north African country follows a reported sighting of a young girl fitting Madeleine's description at a petrol station in Marrakech.

When they return to Portugal, Mrs McCann said it would be time to withdraw from the media attention.

"When I'm speaking in public it helps take my mind off things. It's a distraction because you know that might help, but it's time to step back from that," she said.

Mr McCann said he and his wife would at some point have to make the decision to go home.

"There's been a lot of talking and thinking about that going on behind the scenes. We will not give up, but there will be a different way of doing things.

"I can see myself having to go back to the UK to meet with people, it is just more efficient to do things over there.

"It will be very, very hard. The last time I was back, I couldn't even go into the house. I found it hard enough going to Rothley."

'Can't face leaving'

Mrs McCann said she often awoke thinking it would be the day Madeleine would be found.

"I do actually feel close to Madeleine here. She could actually be further away from here than she is from the UK but I feel emotionally close to her here.

"People have told me that I could do the same, if not more, back in the UK, but I can't face leaving."

The McCanns are expected to move out of their Mark Warner holiday apartment next week and enter more permanent housing.

On Saturday a family spokesman said the couple would probably remain in Portugal at least until the end of the summer.

It is thought Madeleine was snatched from the family's apartment at the Praia da Luz resort while her parents were at a nearby restaurant.



McCanns need break to grieve    Daily Mirror (No longer available online)


11 June 2007

We need break to grieve 


KATE and Gerry McCann are putting their publicity campaign on hold so they can grieve for Madeleine.

They left for Morocco yesterday to follow up a possible sighting of their daughter. But after the two-day trip, they intend to take a break.

Gerry, 39, said: "In the first few weeks when I slipped into dark moments of despair, I was finding it quite easy to emotionally switch a light back on.

"But I've been finding it increasingly difficult to do.

"I don't want to do that any more. I want to be able to grieve and let those emotions out."

He added it was Kate, 38, in particular who wanted to visit Morocco. Gerry said: "It is important. She felt strongly about it."



 
Parents of missing Madeleine visit Morocco    Reuters (No longer available online)

Monday 11 June 2007

LONDON (Reuters) - The parents of missing Madeleine McCann have taken their search to Morocco in the latest of a series of visits to raise awareness of their daughter's disappearance five weeks ago.

Kate and Gerry McCann flew from Lisbon to Casablanca on Sunday before travelling on to the Moroccan capital of Rabat.

The couple plan to visit a number of child welfare groups and meet Interior Minister, Chakib Benmoussa.

It is the latest country they have visited as part of their high-profile campaign to find four-year-old Madeleine, who was abducted from a holiday villa in the Algarve on May 3.

They have already gone to Germany and the Netherlands -- targeting the two countries because the Germans and Dutch are among the largest groups of foreign tourists in the Algarve, after Britons.

The McCanns have also taken their appeal to Spain and met the Pope during a general audience at the Vatican.

The couple intend to meet Fatima Hassar, president of the Moroccan League for the Protection of Children, and visit the National Observatory for Children's Rights on Monday morning said a spokesman for the McCanns.

The McCanns plan to return to Portugal on Tuesday, where they intend to stay for the summer, the spokesman said. Media reports over the weekend suggested Gerry McCann was preparing to leave the Algarve and return to Britain after the Morocco trip.



Children's Posters Give McCanns A Boost
 

10:07pm UK, Monday June 11, 2007

More than 100 children clutching posters of Madeleine McCann greeted the missing girl's parents when they arrived in Morocco.


Children greet the McCanns


Kate and Gerry McCann were delighted by the show of support from the primary school youngsters in the capital Rabat.

Mrs McCann said: "I think if Moroccan children are anything to go by we have a very good chance of getting Madeleine back."

The posters, which had been printed at a local internet cafe, showed Madeleine's face close up.

A large one read: "Stop! Return Madeleine to her family. Please, please, please."

The McCanns have been anxious to travel to Morocco to raise awareness of her disappearance because of its closeness to Spain and Portugal.

Four-year-old Madeleine was snatched from her family's holiday apartment in the Algarve resort of Praia da Luz on May 3.

The couple say the trip will be their last for some time as they now want time to reflect on their loss and grieve.

They will return to Portugal on Tuesday where they told a press conference they will remain for the foreseeable future.

Mr McCann said: "I might have to go home for meetings but Kate and I have no immediate plans to leave Portugal.

"I cannot think about anything else at the moment other than finding Madeleine. I do not know if I would be safe to go back and practise as a doctor at the moment."

Mr McCann said they had been told by the Moroccan authorities that all assistance would be offered in the hunt for Madeleine.

Referring to the sighting of a little girl like her at a petrol filling station in Marrakech, he said they were wary of getting too excited about the claim.

Mr McCann said they had not ruled out visiting other countries in the future, but had no plans to do so at the moment.

"We have got a lot of determination and energy that we want to use in a positive fashion to influence the search."




McCanns: 'We Think Madeleine Is Still Alive'

Jun 12, 2007

Kate and Gerry McCann have told Sky News they think Madeleine is still alive. In an interview with Sky's Crime Correspondent Martin Brunt they say the case must not remain unsolved - and that Madeleine must be found.

(00:02:12)

Transcript

Martin Brunt: (voice over) Their recent travel over thousands of miles has shown Gerry and Kate McCann that they're not alone in their search for Madeleine and it's helped them in other ways.

Kate McCann: The work that we've been doing over the last few weeks has certainly helped Gerry, it's helped us both in that it has kept us focussed and, you know, not dwelling on Madeleine herself so much, you know we've been doing as much as we can, errm... and it's certainly helped Gerry a great deal whereas I've probably had a few moments, perhaps, not so good.

Martin Brunt: (voice over) In Morocco, their last stop to publicise their campaign to find Madeleine, they were overwhelmed by support. They met the Interior Minister and later switched on a website appeal for help in finding Madeleine.
(to McCanns) What comes next? This phase is over, what are your immediate plans?

Gerry McCann: We never, ever wanted this to be a long term campaign, we wanted the... and what we hoped was that by, errm... taking positive action it would speed things up and, you know, that hasn't happened, errr... there are some contingency plans but, errm... you know, I think we're... we're looking at event driven, errm... things to... to keep the profile up and just remind people, I suppose, and the authorities and the public, from time to time, that we will still be searching and that Madeleine is still missing.

Martin Brunt: I wanted to ask you both this question, perhaps. A very simple question: Do you still believe that Madeleine is alive?

Gerry McCann: Yeah.

Martin Brunt: And Kate?

Kate McCann: Certainly no evidence to the contrary, I mean we've said before, obviously, we've considered all scenarios but I think the fact that there's nothing to suggest otherwise, errm... gives us great hope, really. I mean, it's important we cling to that, as well.

Gerry McCann: And what, you know, we... we don't want, and you can imagine the pain, is that this must never end up an unsolved abduction...

Kate McCann: No.

Gerry McCann: ... it must have an outcome and we must find her.

Martin Brunt: (voice over) For the next few days the family want time alone to grieve for Madeleine, not for her death - for her absence. Martin Brunt, Sky News, Rabat.  

*
Comment: When Martin Brunt asks the McCanns if they believe Madeleine is still alive, they both initially shake their heads from side-to-side, as if indicating the answer is 'No'.
 


McCann's Buoyed By Trip To 'Caring' Morocco  Sky News

12 June 2007
 

Madeleine McCann's parents have flown back to Portugal from Morocco where they made the last of their foreign appeals for help in tracing their daughter.



The McCanns in Morocco


Kate and Gerry McCann said they were buoyed by the trip and were still hopeful Madeleine will be found.

They are now taking time to reflect on their efforts to find the four-year-old 40 days after she was snatched from Praia da Luz.

Mr McCann said: "We are very, very glad we went. Kate pushed for it more than me.

"We were actually feeling quite negative before we went, but it was so positive.

"The Moroccans are incredibly family-oriented and they told us they were treating Madeleine's disappearance as they would a Moroccan child.

"We really felt that if she is in Morocco, they will find her."

The couple said they were also impressed by the tight border controls, making the movement of people more difficult.

Mrs McCann said: "We are feeling very reassured. They were taking the case very seriously."

The couple are now in the Algarve with two-year-old twins Sean and Amelie, who were being looked after by relatives.

Speaking earlier to Sky's crime correspondent Martin Brunt they said there was no evidence that Madeleine was not still alive.

Mrs McCann said: "We've considered all scenarios but I think the fact that there is nothing to suggest otherwise gives us great hope.

"It's important that we cling to that as well."

Mr McCann said: "This must never end up an unsolved abduction. We must find her."

The couple, both doctors,say they have no intention of returning to the UK at least until the end of the summer.


They are expected to move out of the apartment complex where they have been staying and into more permanent accomodation soon.



 
Smiles as children greet McCanns in Morocco   Telegraph

By Fiona Govan in Rabat
Last Updated: 2:11AM BST 13 Jun 2007

It was a greeting they had not expected and it brought broad smiles to the faces of Kate and Gerry McCann as they visited Morocco in the last of a series of trips to publicise their daughter's disappearance.

More than 100 children lined up to meet the parents of Madeleine, who has been missing for 40 days, and held up pictures of the four-year-old as they chanted her name.

For the first time since their daughter was taken from her bed in the Portuguese resort of Praia da Luz on May 3, the McCanns appeared relaxed and happy and said that the encounter had brought them renewed hope that their child would be returned.

"It is the best welcome we could have had to Morocco," said Mrs McCann, smiling and laughing as she thanked some of the boys and girls who had turned out to meet them in the capital, Rabat.

"I think if Moroccan children are anything to go by we have a very good chance of getting Madeleine back."

Her husband said: "I think everyone has seen today the support the Moroccan people have given Kate and I, it gives us tremendous heart.

"I truly believe that if she is in Morocco, we will find her."

The couple arrived late on Sunday for a two-day trip to the north African country, which they have been keen to visit in the search for their daughter because of its proximity to Portugal and Spain and its reputation as a haven for paedophiles.

Ferries leave eight times a day from Tarifa in Spain - a five-hour drive from the resort where Madeleine was abducted - on the 35-minute crossing to Morocco.

After a private meeting with the Moroccan interior minister, the McCanns conducted a series of talks with child protection officials.

They then held a news conference to appeal for information. It is understood they also met Morocco's most senior policeman to seek reassurances that everything was being done to investigate the possibility that their daughter is being held in the country.

The McCanns were particularly interested in learning what action had been taken to follow up a sighting of a young girl in Marrakech.

Mari Olli, a Norwegian woman, told police she was "very sure" it was Madeleine she saw at a petrol station on May 9, six days after the abduction. She said the girl asked a man in his late 30s: "Can I see mummy soon?"

During a meeting with the Moroccan League for the Protection of Children, Mr McCann said he and his wife felt it was important to go to places where Madeleine might have been taken.

"There has been no evidence that she is still in Portugal," he said. "We have concerns that she may have been moved out of Portugal very early on and abducted.

"We are very keen to learn from the child welfare groups in this country and we always hoped that by coming here we will have made a difference in helping to raise awareness."

The journey to North Africa was the last visit for the couple, who have already visited Spain, Italy, Germany and Holland.

They will return to Praia da Luz today, where their two-year-old twins, Sean and Amelie, are being cared for by relatives.

They will then "take stock" to decide the next stage in their campaign to find Madeleine.

But Mrs McCann has said she has no intention of returning to Britain without her daughter.




Gerry's blogs


10 Jun 2007 
We attended mass this morning and the Bishop had sent a very nice message that he and everyone else was praying for Madeleine. He also said that our attitude in this time of adversity was an example for others. Contrary to some of the headlines in the Sunday papers the campaign to find Madeleine will not ease up. Kate's and my role will be different after Morocco compared to the last 3 weeks. As I said earlier we will reflect on the investigation, what the campaign has achieved and where we will be best directed. We will be less evident in the media, at least for a few days, unless there is a breakthrough in the investigation. First of all we have Morocco. We drove up to Lisbon late this afternoon to catch a flight to Casablanca where embassy officials will meet us. We were surprised to learn that a 20 seat propeller plane was sent instead of the larger aircraft. Luckily Kate, Clarence and I got squeezed on although we were certainly rather apprehensive about flying on such an aircraft- it reminded us of some of the internal flights we took in New Zealand in the mid 90's. The meeting in Rabat will follow a similar itinerary as to the European visits. We will meet with the ambassador and his staff, two children’s charities, the interior minister and possibly the chief of police. We will do two interviews for the main TV stations and the press conference will be last. I am sure we will be asked about the Marrakech siting which has been extensively reported in the press. I should be able to get some more details of this from ITV, who interviewed the witness, and hopefully the justice minister to find out what enquiries were made by the local police.'


11 Jun 2007 
Gerry's original posting showed: Date: 12 June 2007, Day: 38


We spent the day in Rabat meeting 3 child welfare groups, the minister for interior and the chief of police. We had little knowledge of Morocco before coming here and have learned what a family orientated and child loving society it is. Everyone has been incredibly sympathetic and said they will do everything to help us find Madeleine. As well as the meetings there was a very touching experience outside the National Observatory for Chidren's Rights. As we pulled up in the car there were about 150 children waving posters of Madeleine with the words above and below a picture of her: 

?All Moroccan Children Are With You Madeleine- Madeleine: Back Home?. They were singing and cheering Madeleine's name and shouting ?coeur?, Heart. This whole experience was uplifting and enlightening at the same time in that we had no concept that so many children in Morocco would know of Madeleine and also be internet- friendly. It is just as likely that a child will spot Madeleine and alert a responsible adult. The whole world really has changed and is a lot smaller in this computer age. If Madeleine is in Morocco we have no doubt that she will be found. 

We did a couple of interviews for ITV and Sky and followed up our Newspaper interviews focussing on a change in the phase of the campaign. We confirmed that there will be a period of reflection before we decide on what is the best role for Kate and I. The campaign and the search for Madeleine will continue and with everyone's help we will find her. So please stay with us.


12 Jun 2007 
Gerry's original posting showed: Date: 12 June 2007, Day: 39


We finished off our trip to Morocco with a private visit to the minister for religious affairs this morning. He is an academic, senior cleric and adviser to the King of Morocco. We explained to him that although we are Roman Catholic we have received messages of support and prayers from all religious groups. Leicester, where we live, is extremely diverse culturally with a large proportion of Muslims and there were prayers for Madeline throughout Leicester on Sunday. We asked the minister if prayers could be said for Madeleine and other missing children in Morocco. He told us that people were praying for her and again emphasised that if Madeleine is in Morocco they would find her. En route to the airport a lorry had overturned blocking the exit from the motorway. The Moroccan people dealt with this in a very calm and relaxed manner, which we have found is a very engaging aspect of their character. Arriving back in Praia da Luz it was great to see Sean and Amelie. I think they were happy to see us although have been very well looked after as usual. We have no more trips planned for the immediate future and will spend the next few days taking stock. Tonight we have also gone to the church for prayers, as it is now 40 days and nights since Madeleine was abducted. No child or parent should have to endure his experience and we prayed that she would be found safe and well.
 


Kate's diary

11 Jun 2007 
On the 11th of June, in Morocco, after Kate made a positive evaluation of the trip because there were so many photographers present, the doctor remembers "noticing" Portuguese journalists. "We didn't want to give them a story", decided the McCanns, who classify the questions from the Portuguese as "sleazy and unexpected", even after preparation meetings that last "four hours": "I was very angry at a journalist today. I told her not to do so much detective work."


- Correio da Manhã 27 July 2008

 

Courtesy of Nigel at mccannfiles







 


 


 


 



McCanns' European Campaign - Amsterdam

The campaign reaches Amsterdam where the McCanns are delayed by a mysterious phone call. 




Amsterdam, 06 June 2007 - 07 June 2007

Date: 06 June 2007
Brief overview of events

Kate and Gerry arrive in Amsterdam 3 hours late, missing 2 TV programmes due to the anonymous call that turned out to be 'nothing of interest', according to Gerry.

They do manage to find time to catch up briefly with a few old friends from the time they spent in Amsterdam.



Date:07 June 2007
Brief overview of events

Series of press conference's, meetings and appeals on TV in Amsterdam.

After the scheduled meetings, Gerry catches up with 'a friend of mine who was attending a medical conference in Amsterdam'.

Kate and Gerry return to Praia da Luz in the early evening in time to see the twins.


They later drive to Lagos to attend a musical concert in aid of Madeleine.




McCanns Stay Defiant In Search For Madeleine 

07 June 2007




Sky News Video (No longer available online)


Jun 7 2007

The parents of missing Madeleine McCann say they're still holding out hope that their daughter is alive. Kate and Gerry McCann were speaking in Amsterdam, the latest stop on their tour of Europe to promote awareness about the missing four-year-old.

(00:00:21)

Transcription by Nigel Moore


Kate McCann: "We still have a lot of hope, I think, given that we're now five weeks down the track and there's no evidence to the contrary to say that there has been harm been done to Madeleine. It's incredibly important that we retain that hope, really. I mean, we have to keep looking and we have to do absolutely everything we can, errm... to try and find Madeleine and she deserves that."



McCanns appeal to Dutch in search    BBC News

Last Updated: Thursday, 7 June 2007, 14:44 GMT 15:44 UK

The parents of Madeleine McCann have appealed to the Dutch people to help in the search for their daughter.
Gerry and Kate McCann held a press conference in Amsterdam on the final leg of a two-day trip in Europe raising awareness of Madeleine's disappearance.
"We have to do absolutely everything we can to find Madeleine and she deserves that," Mrs McCann, 38, told reporters.
The McCanns spent a year living in the city in 2004 with Madeleine, who was abducted in the Algarve 35 days ago.
This latest tour has been a difficult one, the couple has said.

Plane diverted

On the findmadeleine.com website, Mr McCann, 39, said Wednesday had left them "very tired and emotionally drained".
Before flying out of Germany, police investigating Madeleine's disappearance said they had received information.
Hastily, the McCanns onward flight to Amsterdam was diverted to the Berlin embassy where they were consulted.
It turned out to be "nothing of interest", wrote Mr McCann.
"We unfortunately had to miss two TV programmes as we arrived in Amsterdam three hours late, very tired and emotionally drained."
Friends in the Netherlands have been working behind the scenes since Madeleine was taken.

Jazz concert

Earlier that same day, the couple were asked in a press conference in Germany whether they had something to do with the four-year-old's abduction.
Mr McCann wrote on the website he was surprised by the question but hoped his answers had removed any doubt.
He told the reporter for German radio: "Without going into too much detail, we were with a large group of people, and you know there is absolutely no way Kate and I are involved in this abduction."
The McCanns are expected to fly back to the Algarve in time for a jazz concert in their daughter's name in Lagos.
While away, their young twins, Sean and Amelie, have been looked after by relatives at the Praia da Luz resort.
It is thought Madeleine was snatched from the family's apartment at the resort on 3 May while her parents were at a nearby restaurant.






Mystery man says he knows Madeleine's fate   Timesonline (No longer available online)

07 June 2007
 


Gerry, left, and Kate McCann, parents of four-year old Madeleine McCann, missing in the Portuguese town of Praia Da Luz since May, present a picture of their daughter during a press conference in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, Thursday, June 7, 2007. "Specifically for Dutch tourists in the Algarve, in the two weeks leading up to the abduction, we are asking them to look at any photographs they have taken around the time," Gerry McCann told a crowd of Dutch media. He defended the couple's choice to travel to various countries seeking attention for the case, after a reporter in Berlin on Wednesday questioned their motives. "We believe that this will help search for Madeleine," he said. "Top sentence reads: Look into my eyes! (Evert Elzinga/AP)


David Brown in Praia da Luz and Thomas Catan in Madrid
June 7, 2007

Police searching for Madeleine McCann have told her parents that they have received a "credible call" from a man claiming to know what happened to their daughter following her abduction 36 days ago.

Kate and Gerry McCann were asked if they were prepared to speak to the man after he told police that he wanted to talk directly to Madeleine's parents. The couple hoped the call was the breakthrough they have been praying for in the five weeks since their four-year-old daughter disappeared from her bedroom in an Algarve holiday apartment.

The call, which is believed to have been made to police in Spain, was traced to an unregistered pay-as-you-go phone which appeared to be from a country outside Europe. The nationality of the caller was not clear.

Information provided by the anonymous man yesterday afternoon convinced British police officers, who are liaising with the Portuguese-led inquiry into Madeleine's disappearance, that it was necessary to inform the McCanns immediately and to ask them to speak to the caller. However, 24 hours on, detectives have still been unable to re-establish contact with the caller.

It is not known what information in the call convinced detectives that the caller was credible enough to be put him contact with the McCanns.

The couple, from Rothley, Leicestershire were first contacted by police at around 3pm on Wednesday as they prepared to travel from meetings in Berlin to the city's Tempelhof Airport for a private jet flight to Amsterdam. British police liaison officers advised them that the mystery source might try to make contact and that they should delay their flight in case he called when they were in the air.

Frantic efforts followed to try to re-establish contact, as the McCanns waited anxiously for news for three hours at the British Embassy in Berlin. An emergency contingency plan was drawn up in which the McCanns would speak direct to the man.

The contingency plan involved the McCann's flying back to Britain where they were to be met by a specialist team of advisors to oversee their talks with the source. But when efforts to re-establish contact with the caller failed the McCanns were finally advised to proceed to Amsterdam as planned. They took off bound for Amsterdam's Schipol Airport at 7.30pm, three hours later than planned.

A British police source said yesterday: "The McCanns were delayed in Berlin after information came into the inquiry which required their urgent attention.
"There was a possibility of a new line of communication being opened up and a flight back to the UK was discussed. The importance of this line of inquiry is still being assessed and attempts to re-establish contact are continuing."

Mr McCann today used his internet blog to suggest that the couple no longer believed the call was significant. "We had to delay our onward flight to Amsterdam because of some information received by the police, which we needed to be consulted on. We diverted to the embassy in Berlin but it turned out to be nothing of interest," he wrote on www.findmadeleine.com.

A spokeswoman for the Spanish Interior Ministry said: "We categorically deny that anyone has called the Spanish police with information that they have got this girl."
Portuguese police yesterday refused to comment. Under strict laws of judicial secrecy they are forbidden from talking about developments in the investigation.

The McCanns were today still said to be ready and willing to talk directly to mystery man if contact can be re-established. Mr McCann said yesterday that he believed that a single telephone call could return Madeleine home.

"Somebody can help us find Madeleine," he said. "It is one telephone call - either a location or a name and that is what we are appealing for."

He had said that it was difficult dealing with the hundreds of claims from people who claim to know where Madeleine was being held. Most of the claims are from clairvoyants or people who have had "visions". One claim made in an email was later traced to a Hampshire schoolboy who has learning difficulties.

Mr McCann, 39, said: "They say they know where your daughter is, this might be the key piece of information and it is hard." The consultant cardiologist said the temptation was to believe them but if you did so you would "get your hopes up and consistently dashed".

A Spanish newspaper claimed yesterday that it had traced a man matching the description of the person who Mr and Mrs McCann believe was seen carrying their daughter away from their apartment in the Ocean Club complex.

El Mundo said that the man, who has been jailed abroad for a paedophile offence, had told friends that he was going to the Algarve a week before Madeleine disappeared. The newspaper suggested that Madeleine had been identified for abduction some time before she went missing, and that she had been kidnapped by an international paedophile network.

The McCanns today came to the end of the European section of their campaign to promote the search for their daughter. They have been to Italy, Spain, Germany and the Netherlands in a bid to raise awareness about her abduction. They plan to go to Morocco at the weekend.

They were in Amsterdam today for the first time since 2004, when they lived there for a year.

Mr McCann said: "It is particularly sad for Kate and I to come back for the first time and not to come back with Madeleine, who spent a year here with us. It is very emotional, we have fond memories of our year in Amsterdam. We have a lot of good friends here who have been working behind the scenes to help us.

"We have come to the Netherlands today with a very specific objective. After British and German tourists, the largest group of nationals who make up the tourists in the Algarve are the Dutch.

Mr McCann said that the last week of tours had targeted countries which have large numbers of tourists in the Algarve: "We are not going to go to every country in Europe. We are not selling a book, we are not pop stars, we have come here for a very specific reason."

Mrs McCann, 38, said: "We are amateurs in this. There are very few people who will have to go through anything as painful as this."

Mr McCann, 39, said: "They say they know where your daughter is, this might be the key piece of information and it is hard." The consultant cardiologist said the temptation was to believe them but if you did so you would "get your hopes up and consistently dashed".

A Spanish newspaper claimed yesterday that it had traced a man matching the description of the person who Mr and Mrs McCann believe was seen carrying their daughter away from their apartment in the Ocean Club complex.

El Mundo said that the man, who has been jailed abroad for a paedophile offence, had told friends that he was going to the Algarve a week before Madeleine disappeared. The newspaper suggested that Madeleine had been identified for abduction some time before she went missing, and that she had been kidnapped by an international paedophile network.

The McCanns today came to the end of the European section of their campaign to promote the search for their daughter. They have been to Italy, Spain, Germany and the Netherlands in a bid to raise awareness about her abduction. They plan to go to Morocco at the weekend.

They were in Amsterdam today for the first time since 2004, when they lived there for a year.

Mr McCann said: "It is particularly sad for Kate and I to come back for the first time and not to come back with Madeleine, who spent a year here with us. It is very emotional, we have fond memories of our year in Amsterdam. We have a lot of good friends here who have been working behind the scenes to help us.

"We have come to the Netherlands today with a very specific objective. After British and German tourists, the largest group of nationals who make up the tourists in the Algarve are the Dutch.

Mr McCann said that the last week of tours had targeted countries which have large numbers of tourists in the Algarve: "We are not going to go to every country in Europe. We are not selling a book, we are not pop stars, we have come here for a very specific reason."

Mrs McCann, 38, said: "We are amateurs in this. There are very few people who will have to go through anything as painful as this."







'I know where Madeleine is' call traced to Argentina   Daily Mail

09 June 2007
Last updated at 11:59am on 9th June 2007


The hunt for abducted Madeleine McCann was linked to South America today for the first time.

It is understood a mysterious call claiming to know the whereabouts of the four-year-old came from a mobile phone registered in Argentina.

The "credible" call was considered so potentially significant that the McCanns halted their search of Europe to help police investigate.

They delayed their flight from Berlin to Amsterdam by three hours and plans were drawn up to divert to the UK.

It was thought the McCanns might need to return to Britain to talk to specialist advisers about the call.

The call from the pay-as-you-go phone came from a man who wanted to speak directly to the McCanns, according to Spanish police sources.

He did not reveal his identity or nationality, but the phone was soon linked to the South American country.

All efforts to re-establish contact with the caller failed on Wednesday and the couple carried on with their journey around Europe.

A British police source said: "The importance of this line of inquiry is still being assessed and attempts to re-establish contact are continuing."

Although Spanish officials denied they had received the call, a Guardia Civil source told the Portuguese paper Correio de Manha: "Only time will tell if this call gives help or not to the case."

Spanish newspaper El Mundo reported that a man matching the description released by Portuguese police two weeks ago was seen in a bar in Seville a week before Madeleine's abduction.

It claimed the man was working on the instruction of others and told fellow drinkers he was going to the Algarve.

The latest development comes on the day Portuguese police were forced to defend their reputation amid allegations that they were enjoying boozy lunches while the search for Madeleine continued. Armed police officers were also criticised by Madeleine's aunt for preventing her from putting up posters of the little girl at Lisbon Airport.

Senior police officers involved in the investigation were seen laughing and joking as images of the missing four-year-old and her desperate parents appeared on a restaurant TV screen.

It happened at a lunch lasting nearly two hours as Kate and Gerry McCann were away campaigning in Europe.

They laughed and cracked jokes as they enjoyed a meal washed down with wine and whisky - as footage of the couple played in the background.

Afterwards, they left a table littered with empty glasses - and went back to work.

Yesterday Policia Judiciara (PJ) spokesman Olegario Sousa, one of the officers spotted having lunch, said it was up to the individual to decide what he or she ate and drank.

Asked if it was acceptable for police to drink alcohol in their lunch break he said: "I don't know, it is very, very sad but a person's free time is for lunch. That is normal to do.

"The persons are in charge in the day, they are working in the day but they must eat and drink - it is normal.

"I drink what I want to drink when I can drink."

When it was put to him that he had been seen drinking, he said: "Have you seen anyone drunk? Have you seen any action deterred by that?"

Mr Sousa and Goncalo Amaral, head of the regional PJ, were spotted as Kate and Gerry McCann travelled to Berlin and Amsterdam to appeal for more information about their missing daughter.

In Portimao, a town near where the four-year-old was snatched 35 days ago, a diner at fish restaurant Carvi said he recognised the police officials.

"I knew who they were because Mr Sousa has been all over the TV and in the papers," he said.

The diner watched as officers enjoyed the lunch, which took place a short walk from the police station less than 24 hours after Kate and Gerry McCann were told that everything possible was being done to find their little girl.

Then - in what looked like becoming the first arrest in this case after nearly five weeks, a photographer trying to take a picture of them emerging from the restaurant was detained, held for four hours, fingerprinted, interviewed, and had his camera confiscated. He has now been formally named as an 'Arguido' - the same status as the chief suspect in Madeleine's disappearance, Robert Murat.

On Tuesday, two groups went to two separate restaurants. The bigger party did not begin to leave for an hour and three-quarters. The smaller party had a 50-euro meal of fish and wine and shared jokes between what appeared to be discussion about police business.

On Wednesday, the party included senior figures from police headquarters at Portimao, where the investigation is based. One of them was Ch Insp Olegario Sousa, the public face of the inquiry, who appears on TV at press conferences. Another was Goncalo Amaral, number three in the investigation and a well-known figure in major police operations.

At 12.50pm the two men strolled across a sun-drenched square to Carvi restaurant, a regular haunt that specialises in fresh seafood and lobster straight from the tank. Inside, they formed a table of four with two other officers.

The diner said: 'They asked for the Portuguese TV news to be switched on and sat at the table watching it. It must have been about 2pm. Madeleine's parents had given a press conference in Berlin and they came on the screen.'

At that Berlin conference, Gerry McCann had made it clear he was confident police were doing all they could to find Madeleine. During a live broadcast that morning he had said: 'We have had no doubts about the desire of the police to find Madeleine. We have witnessed their efforts first hand and they're working harder than Kate and I.'

The diner added: 'The police were laughing and joking among themselves while it was on. They seemed to be sharing some sort of joke. Whatever it was, I thought that laughing like that in public was in really poor taste.

'They had a bottle of chilled wine with the meal but they had a bottle of whisky on the table after the main course as well. I was pretty shocked to see they were drinking whisky at lunchtime. The bottle was passing between them for about half an hour.

'Someone on another table seemed to know them and joked about them having two-hour lunches and knocking back Johnnie Walker Black. He said they would get themselves in the papers.

'There was a guy in a red shirt holding court about Portuguese law. They were discussing a change in the law being planned for Arguidos.' (Portuguese for suspect).

Two of the party left, then Ch Insp Sousa left on his own, leaving a colleague behind.

'I got the impression they went there regularly - they were very friendly with the waiter. I don't know what time they came in but I was there for a good 90 minutes and when I left, one of them was still slumped back in his chair in the corner with the whisky bottle in front of him. He was a big sweaty guy and he was sagging into the chair. The table was littered with empty glasses.

'There was some sort of commotion and I heard someone shout out. They swore and said something about the 'Paparazzi Ingles' (English Paparazzi) hiding behind the door.'

One officer had insisted privately the Madeleine officers had been working 'punishing hours', sometimes sleeping overnight at the station in the early days of the inquiry.

Philomena McCann, Madeleine's aunt, said such behaviour would not be acceptable in the UK: "If it were detectives from Scotland Yard there would be absolute uproar.

"But we have to let them to get on with their work because that's all we have to rely on.

"It is a different country and we have to accept the way that they do things and that it is a different culture where they have lunches and siestas but we hope the work is made up at other times."

She then told how armed police officers stopped her putting up posters of the little girl at Lisbon airport.

She and another relative were travelling from the Algarve to the holy shrine at Fatima when they made a diversion to the airport.

Kate McCann had noticed there were no pictures up when she passed through on her way to Madrid.

"She was so upset to think there were so many tourists coming in and out and nothing there to remind people of Madeleine," said Ms McCann.

"She asked me to make a detour on the way. I was given permission to put the posters up by a woman on the information desk.

"But straightaway we were swooped on by two armed police officers. I was with a relative who was bodily manhandled by them.

"We went back to the information desk and there was a big row between the woman and the police."

Ms McCann said the director of the airport Dr Francisco Severino told them they could fax a request which would be considered.

"It would be fair to say we were unimpressed by their unhelpful attitude," she said. "We were very badly treated.

"It seemed clear they didn't want the negativity affecting tourism but I think they are doing the wrong thing.

"Surely if people think the police and the authorities are doing everything they can to find Madeleine other families visiting Portugal would feel more secure."

Ms McCann said she had asked junior Justice Minister Baroness Ashton to put pressure on to change their policy.

The McCanns are back in Portugal today ahead of a trip to Morocco, where there has been a reported sighting of Madeleine.

In Praia da Luz today, the couple watched as 1,000 yellow balloons calling for information about Madeleine were released into the air.

Meanwhile in Praia da Luz, the Algarve resort from which Madeleine vanished on May 3, police removed their 'do not cross' tape from the McCanns' holiday apartment and withdrew all police presence exceprt for one uniformed officer outside. Alipio Ribiero, national director of the Judicial Police, said: 'The Judicial Police are seriously investigating this case. It could take time but we continue in the Algarve, even if our presence is not noticed.'

The exhausted couple had their hopes dramatically raised that their daughter was still alive yesterday - only to see them dashed.

The couple's planned flight to Amsterdam on Wednesday night was held for three hours in Berlin after what appeared to be a crucial breakthrough.

They were told that a "credible call" had been received by Spanish police from a man suggesting he knew where Madeleine was and saying that he wanted to talk to the McCanns.

The call was reportedly traced to an unregistered pay-as-you-go phone outside Europe.

The caller did not disclose his identity, but the information supplied was apparently so specific that British police liaising with the Portuguese inquiry felt it necessary to tell the McCanns immediately.

The couple were advised that the mystery source might try to make contact, and that they should delay their flight in case he called when they were in the air.

As frantic efforts were made to re-establish contact with the caller the McCanns were whisked off the flight, waiting anxiously for nearly three hours at the British Embassy in Berlin. The man never called back.

Journalists on the plane were told that the crew had been asked to draw up a new flight plan involving a possible switch of destination from Amsterdam to East Midlands Airport, close to the McCanns' Leicestershire home.

But at 7.30pm the flight was cleared to continue to Amsterdam, where the McCanns pressed ahead with their European campaign to keep their daughter in the public mind.

Soon after they touched down, it appeared that the call was a hoax, or was no longer being treated with any urgency.

Spanish police categorically denied that they had received such a call, as did the Spanish Interior Ministry.

It was an illustration of the kind of distractions the McCanns are having to endure in their relentless search for information about Madeleine, who vanished more than a month ago during the family's holiday in Portugal.

Another followed soon afterwards when a Spanish newspaper quoted an "investigative journalist" claiming he knew the identity of Madeleine's abductor, and suggesting she had been stolen to order by a paedophile ring.

Last night, however, there was no indication that police were investigating the claim.




 
A day in the grief of the McCanns     Daily Mirror
Martin Fricker in Praia da Luz, 9/06/2007

EVERY morning, as dawn breaks over Praia da Luz, Kate and Gerry McCann wake... but their nightmare continues.

There is no respite from the terrible reality - their little daughter Madeleine is still missing. 

They do not know where their helpless four-year-old is, they don't even know if she is still alive.

But somehow each morning Kate and Gerry must find the strength to function for the sake of their two-year-old twins Sean and Amelie, for their own sakes and for the sake of Madeleine.

The couple rise early, dress the twins, go for a morning jog then sit down for a family breakfast.

It's a routine that has imposed some little order - and comfort - in these darkest of dark days.

After eating, the parents - hearts and minds already racing - play some games with the twins or read them stories from their favourite book We're Going on a Bear Hunt.

Then they take them to a nearby creche - walking past the apartment from which Madeleine was snatched. But they are careful to mask their turmoil to protect the twins, who have no idea of the torment over their missing big sister.

Life for the McCanns has been turned upside down, yet life has to go on as normal.

That is why you see photos of them laughing and smiling in the childrens' playground at the Ocean Club resort.

Last week, they spent the day at a beach outside Praia da Luz and enjoyed a meal in a local restaurant - in the full glare of the world's media.

Their close friends admit the hunt is taking its toll on the pair. They are planning on staying in Portugal for the rest of summer to continue the search.

Yesterday, the police hunt switched to Argentina. A mobile phone used by a Spanish-speaking man claiming to know where Madeleine is was registered there. A police source said: "The mobile phone is unregistered.

"But the Sim card is from Argentina. Attempts to re-establish contact are continuing."

Kate and Gerry will fly to Morocco tomorrow to highlight their daughter's disappearance in North Africa.

Publicly, they insist they remain strong and healthy - and above all confident of seeing their daughter again.

Privately things are tougher. Friends say the hardest time is when they are alone with Sean and Amelie. This is when they notice Madeleine's absence most.

Gerry said: "When we have family time, just on our own, it's very difficult because Madeleine is not there. It really brings it home to us. She is such an outgoing, lively, vivacious character. She fills our existence, and Sean and Amelie's."

The McCanns try their best to blank out the pain by remaining busy.

A family friend said: "Breakfast is the usual chaotic scene. At about 9am they take Sean and Amelie to the creche, which they find hard because they go past their old apartment."

While the twins are in creche, Kate and Gerry talk with lawyers, speak to family and friends back home in the UK, and speak to media advisers. By lunchtime, they pick up Sean and Amelie and spend most afternoons with them at the pool.

Gerry's sister Trish Cameron and her husband Sandy are living next door to help out where needed. The friend said: "Trish and Sandy cook most meals, wash and iron their clothes and give the apartment a clean.

"And whenever Kate and Gerry go on one of their trips, Trish and Sandy will look after the twins."

At the end of the day, the parents bathe the twins and read them stories before putting them to bed at about 8pm.

Kate and Gerry then talk about how the campaign is going and plan the next days events over a meal. Despite her gaunt appearance, Kate continues to eat regularly. The friend said: 

"People have said Kate has lost weight, but she does not feel that is the case. She is still eating."

The couple try to get to bed by midnight. But before climbing into bed, Kate and Gerry pray for their daughter's safe return.

"Sleep is patchy," said the friend. "Some nights are better than others, but most of the time they never get more than five hours." The strain is beginning to tell. Initially, Gerry came across as strong and composed.

But he has begun to show more signs he is finding the hunt a struggle. In Rome, as the pair waited to meet Pope Benedict XVI, at one point Gerry began to cry. When they finally met the Pope, it was Gerry who kissed his hand, not the more religious Kate.
In Amsterdam, Gerry cracked again, his voice creaking with emotion at a press conference.
But throughout the ordeal he has been a rock for his wife. Kate, a locum GP from Liverpool, finds it difficult to talk to reporters. Instead, she clutches Madeleine's pink Cuddle Cat and fiddles with her rosary beads. She thinks about Madeleine every minute. Wherever she goes, Kate wears green and yellow ribbons in her hair to symbolise hope.

She repeatedly watches a short video clip of Madeleine she filmed as the youngster raced up the steps of the plane bound for Portugal.

But Kate has grown more confident in front of the world's media.

When a German reporter suggested the McCanns were involved in Madeleine's disappearance, it was Kate who responded first. The couple have repeatedly faced reporters, answering the same questions: "What is Cuddle Cat?", "Do you regret leaving the children?", "How long will you stay in Portugal?"

But despite this, I have never seen Kate or Gerry lose their temper or show the slightest sign of annoyance.

They probably hate talking to journalists, they probably can't stand cameras in their faces.
But they put up with it for one reason and one reason only - they want little Madeleine back.




Gerry's blogs


06 Jun 2007 
Today seemed to go very well with huge interest in our search for Madeleine. There has also been a little bit of criticism in the German press about the amount of media coverage but this did not seem to diminish the level of interest. The German interviewers are a little more direct with their questions but I was still surprised by the question as to whether Kate and I may be involved in Madeleine's abduction! Hopefully our answers removed any doubt on that score and that our sole focus in all of the family campaigning is to get Madeleine back. After the media we met with a couple of politicians in private. Firstly, we saw the deputy justice minister for Germany who gave us reassurances regarding the investigation. Following this we met the Mayor of Berlin who is a very powerful and charismatic politician. He asked us what he could do for us and following this meeting asked German tourists who were in the Algarve around the time of Madeleine's abduction to come forward. He is very popular and such public backing should help our appeal. We had to delay our onward flight to Amsterdam because of some information received by the police, which we needed to be consulted on. We diverted to the embassy in Berlin but it turned out to be nothing of interest. We unfortunately had to miss 2 TV programmes as we arrived in Amsterdam 3 hours late, very tired and emotionally drained. We did manage to catch up with a few friends briefly who we know from the year we lived in Amsterdam. They have been actively campaigning here on our behalf with poster distribution, contacting media and liasing with companies to get advertising space for large posters of Madeleine.


07 Jun 2007 
The press conference, meetings and appeal on TV today in Amsterdam all seemed to go well. I doubt there are many people left in Europe who do not know of Madeleine's disappearance and hopefully everyone who has information will have come forward to the police. Today was particularly difficult for Kate and I because of the year we spent in Amsterdam with Madeleine. We have many friend s still there and could never have imagined coming back without her in such dreadful circumstances. Afterwards we caught with a friend of mine who was attending a medical conference in Amsterdam and a friend who helps run a playgroup that we attended We arrived back in Portugal and managed to spend some time with Sean and Amelie. We then drove to the concert in Lagos in aid of Madeleine, which is the first large public event in Portugal that I know of supporting the campaign. It was interesting mix of jazz, blues, orchestra and rap! We were presented with a painting with green and yellow hands from a class of schoolkids- hands of hope. There was a short speech and Kate thanked tke local community for their support. The amount of media coverage Madeleine's disappearance has received is phenomenal. After Morocco we will have to take stock and decide on our best strategy. I am not convinced going to other European countries and holding meetings similar to Berlin and Amsterdam will help.
 


Kate's diary


07 Jun 2007 
The Press conference went well. People are always asking how we are managing to cope, how we can manage to run a campaign, as if we are strange because we are able to appear calm and controlled and aren't going under all the time. They know so little. Nobody should judge or criticise because, unless they have already been in this situation, they have NO IDEA how they would be and certainly NO IDEA how painful it is. NO IDEA AT ALL. I love you so much Madeleine xxxx
I can't bear this. I can't bear being without Madeleine. It's like torture—a slow, painful death. I hope her suffering, if she is suffering, is much less. Please God.


Courtesy of Nigel at mccannfiles