News from September through to December 2011 that is not covered elsewhere on the site
"I do not think Madeleine is dead,"
says Kate McCann, 01 September 2011
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"I do not think Madeleine is dead," says Kate McCann, mother of the small girl who disappeared
four years ago in Portugal, in an exclusive conversation with Marie Claire. Marie Claire
She does not lose hope of finding her daughter and gives details from the case in the book that will be launched
at the Rio de Janeiro Book Fair, from Friday onwards.
By Livia Deodato 01/09/2011 With thanks to Ines for translation
Her speech is halting and her voice seems to be constantly choked
by tears ready to break. It is difficult to estimate the pain and sadness felt by Kate McCann, four years after the disappearance
of her daughter Madeleine. Now aged 43, the British woman does not cease in the search for her first born. She abandoned medicine
and, since 3rd May 2007, has dedicated herself exclusively to gather information sent by people from all over the world who
claim to have found the girl – if she were alive, she would be eight years old (on http://www.findmadeleine.com site there is an age progressed image of her current appearance).
The police officially archived the case in July 2008. But Kate
and her family have not. The book entitled "Madeleine" was launched in the UK and in Portugal in May and now arrives
in Brazil (Editora Prumo, 440 pages, R$ 49,90). Based upon the diary written by Kate during the years and during the police
investigation, the book raises the hypothesis of a kidnapping by a paedophile network, criticises the investigation led by
the Portuguese police (and the lack of action on the part of the British) and tells of the crisis brought to the relationship
between Kate and Gerry, Madeleine's father. The younger children, the twins Sean and Amelie, now aged six and a half,
continue to ask about their older sister and explain to their young friends that "Mummy used to be a doctor, but now
she is searching for Madeleine".
"There is still hope. We live in a kind of limbo since she disappeared,
but we cannot give up," said Kate in the exclusive interview she granted to Marie Claire.
Marie Claire
– How do you feel today? And how are Gerry and the twins? Kate McCann – Very well, considering everything
we have been through. We are much stronger. Now, we try to find a balance. Gerry works full time and my work has been to continue
to search for Madeleine. Now we also have the chance to do normal things, family things, like taking Sean and Amelie to school.
MC – Do the twins often ask about Madeleine? KM – Not every day, but often. Her
disappearance is also part of their lives. They understand what happened and what we are trying to do. Their understanding
is very simple: "Madeleine is missing and we have to find her". We always talk about her rescue, about what we will
do when she returns home, about hope.
MC – The hope of finding Madeleine has become your reason for
living. What would your reaction be if you discovered that she is dead? KM – Unfortunately, I consider
all possibilities. During the last few days I have only managed to think the worst. But we still have hope, in any case. I
read about many other cases, of families who managed to get their children back decades after their disappearance. We cannot
give up. It is hard not knowing anything about her whereabouts – we are living in a kind of limbo since she disappeared.
It is so difficult to shake off the dust and find direction. We have to continue to search.
MC –
You no longer work? Do you dedicate all your time to the search for Madeleine? KM – I no longer work as
a doctor. The last four years have probably been the years during which I have been the busiest in my "professional"
life. I have spent a lot of time reading the police files, writing my book and also launching search campaigns for Madeleine.
Even opening Gmail takes a lot of time. Sean and Amelie understand and always tell their young friends: "Mummy used to
be a doctor, but now she is searching for Madeleine". Until we find her, there is still a lot of work to be done.
MC – Do you still have police support in the search for her? KM – The official police
work was stopped in July 2008. We continue with a private investigation and we have had incredible help from people, who gave
up their holidays, continuing to search for her, they take photographs of girls they think could be Madeleine and they send
them to us.
MC – Did the most recent news, that Madeleine could have been found in India, bring you
any greater hope? KM – We receive dozens of pieces of news daily about the supposed whereabouts of Madeleine.
In this case, the difference was that this information arrived at the media, which followed it and led to its repercussion.
However, that she was supposedly found in India gives me more strength: that even at such a distance, I can count on the help
of persons who continue to search for her.
MC – Is there any reason for you to smile today? KM
– For a long time, I did not allow myself to enjoy life and felt guilty if I did so. But the thing is that if I had
not taken time, I would never have anywhere to get strength from in order to continue searching. I have two other children
and now I am stronger. I feel more capable of facing life – and I do this for Madeleine.
MC –
Do you manage to feel the presence of Madeleine? KM – I do not think Madeleine is dead. Any mother would
feel the same way. I believe Madeleine is out there and, at times, I feel close to her. Any mother would feel this. I feel
close to her. Madeleine is part of our family. We do not feel that this is the end.
MC – How do you
deal with the memories left by Madeleine? Can you look at photos and videos? KM – They are very good memories.
When I begin to think of them, I sometimes feel sadness, at other times they leave me happy and comfort me, they bring me
tranquillity. She is in our life. There are photos of her all over our house. Amelie always refers to her as "my big
sister".
MC – At a certain moment, you were accused of being suspects. How did you cope with
that? KM - (choked voice). I found it incredible. When you imagine that nothing worse could happen...the search
for Madeleine became my greatest obsession. And many people do not understand this. It is like a nightmare, a bad dream that
you can't remember.
MC – On the other hand, you have received support from
people across the world… KM – I would not be capable of describing the importance of the support
that I have received since Madeleine's disappearance. That has helped me enormously. People have been very good and caring
– and this also has strengthened us to continue the fight. We have even had a large support from Brazil, from a very
kind family that became very close to us.
MC – How is your relation with the press nowadays? KM
– We need the media. Madeleine needs the media in order to be found. We have a hard time with the press. But I hope
the press will help to find Madeleine. We just ask journalists to be responsible with the information, because it is our little
one who is missing.
MC – Is it very painful or exhausting to continue to give interviews? Or do you
think that this is what you must do so that the searches for Madeleine continue? KM – At the beginning
I found this very intimidating. The questions appeared to me to be very difficult and they interfered too much with my feelings.
I always tried to preserve my privacy. But as I have already given dozens and dozens of interviews during the past four years,
I have got used to it a bit. I know that the media is powerful and reached millions of people. And if this is necessary to
bring my Madeleine back, then I will do this.
MC – Do you often visit Portugal? KM
– Yes. We often go to Lisbon to talk with our lawyers. I also go to Praia da Luz five times a year (the site of the
resort where the family was on holiday and from which Madeleine was abducted). For a long time after her disappearance I did
not manage to return there, but I now go there often because I feel closer to her there.
MC – What
will be your next steps now? KM – I continue to write my diary. The book was launched in the UK and in
Portugal in May. Next week it will be launched in Brazil, in September in Germany, in October in Spain and in some other countries
before the end of the year. People will read the book and will know that there are still various unanswered questions –
and to which they might be able to respond. We believe in the information that is sent to us and we hope to gather more in
order to find her. I have faith that we will find the key information which is missing in order to find her. Keep searching
and praying for Madeleine, who is still missing. We cannot give up.
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We want justice for the death of our
mother in Greece, says son of Jean Hanlon, 02 September 2011
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Michael has spent thousands on the case. He hired a lawyer, and Gerry and Kate McCann's former
spokesman Clarence Mitchell, and travelled to Crete six times to gather evidence.
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We want justice for the death of our mother in Greece, says son of Jean Hanlon Daily Record
Karen Bale Sep 2 2011
NEARLY three years have passed since Michael Porter kissed his mum goodbye.
They parted at the airport,
where Jean Hanlon caught a plane back to her "Shirley Valentine" life in Crete.
The next time Michael
saw Jean, 53, she was lying on a slab in a filthy Greek morgue. Her body had been found in the sea, four days after she went
missing.
The Greek authorities claimed Jean's death was an accident, but Michael and his brothers David and
Robert were convinced it was murder.
They kept up the pressure on the Greeks, travelling to Crete to do their own
detective work and speak to witnesses.
Their efforts eventually forced local police to admit that Jean's body
had a horrific catalogue of injuries, including a broken neck.
And now the brothers are closer than ever to the
justice they crave. Two suspects have been identified and a murder trial could start in weeks.
"We've
waited so long for justice for mum," Michael, 26, told the Record. "Finally we've been told the trial should
begin in two or three months.
"Our lawyer's optimistic. He has strong, hard evidence.
"We've
heard that one of the suspects is threatening to leave the country, which could mean the case collapses.
"But
we have to keep pushing. We've almost got the case to court.
"We're doing this for mum - and we won't
let her down."
Jean, from Dumfries, quit a steady job at her local hospital and sold her house to follow her
heart and start a new life in the sunshine.
She moved to Crete in 2003, working in bars and restaurants in the
summer and coming home in the winter. Michael last saw her on one of her trips back to see her family.
A few months
later, in March 2009, Jean disappeared. Four days later, on Friday the 13th, her body was found in the sea off the town of
Heraklion.
Michael said: "When she vanished, my first reaction was disbelief. I'm a worrier, and I started
to panic that the worst had happened - and then it did.
"Next thing we knew we were flying to Greece
to identify a body.
"We were taken to a dirty morgue where cats and dogs were running about and sanitary bins
were overflowing.
"The way mum's body was left on the table, they had so little respect for her.
"We were shown a pile of clothes, which was when I knew deep down it was mum. I recognised them.
"But
I couldn't accept it. Her body was unrecognisable. Her face had been destroyed by the water and battered beyond recognition.
"We refused to identify the body and ordered blood tests, which, eventually, proved it was mum."
The Greeks signed off Jean's death as an accident and dismissed the case, but her family knew from the start that "nothing
added up" and they would have to get to the truth themselves.
Michael has spent thousands on the case. He
hired a lawyer, and Gerry and Kate McCann's former spokesman Clarence Mitchell, and travelled to Crete six times to gather
evidence.
He interviewed suspects and witnesses and trawled through his mum's diaries and belongings. Everything
he learned only made him more suspicious.
Michael recalled: "My brothers and I went to her home village, we
went to Heraklion and we tracked down the last people to have seen mum.
"We found out exactly where she had
been that day. We knew something wasn't right."
One of Jean's closest friends, a man called Peter,
told how she went to a bar in Heraklion, 25 minutes from her home village, with a Greek man who spoke no English on the night
she disappeared.
During the "date", Jean sent Peter a text that said simply, "Help." He didn't
know if she was in trouble, or just trapped with a boring suitor.
Peter spoke to Jean on the phone and she sounded
drunk, but the post mortem confirmed she was not.
Michael seriously doubts that his mum was on a "date"
with the man. He said: "She had a job interview that night to get work for the summer season.
"Why would
she then go to Heraklion with a man who didn't speak English?
"She didn't drive and had no way of
getting home, and she had agreed to babysit a disabled girl in her village the next day.
"She wouldn't
go on a date with a strange man, without a lift back home, knowing she had promised to look after a child."
Desperate for answers, the family took Jean's body back to Scotland for a second post mortem.
The results
were inconclusive, but the family's pressure told on the Greeks.
After Jean's case featured on the local
version of Crimewatch, the police suddenly admitted that she had a broken neck, a blunt force injury at the back of her head,
a broken spine, a shattered coccyx, broken ribs, punctured lung and gouges to her knees and shins when her body was found.
The cops claimed the injuries had been revealed by a secondary post mortem, but the family had already buried Jean
by then so there was no body to examine.
"It made us so angry," Michael said. "They'd obviously
had that information all along, but for whatever reason had kept it to themselves."
The local police then
announced they had two suspects in the murder inquiry, both friends of Jean. The men were questioned and told not to leave
Crete.
Last November, Michael and David were asked to come to the island to give statements to the prosecuting
judge investigating the case.
Nine agonising months then passed with no more news of the case - until David flew
to Crete last week to try to find out what was happening. He returned with the news the family had waited years to hear -
that a trial was poised to start.
They are not daring to get their hopes up - they have been let down too many
times. But whatever twists have yet to come, they know one thing - they will never stop fighting.
Michael , an
actor and singer who lives in Majorca, said: "When I think of mum, I think of her lying in the morgue.
"Even
when I'm doing nice things, like relaxing on a lilo on the sea, I think of her body in the harbour. They are horrible
thoughts.
"I want to remember her as mum, as my best friend. And I don't think I can until this is over."
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Kate McCann: I truly believe Maddie
is alive, 04 September 2011
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By Tracey Kandohla Sunday
September 4,2011
KATE McCann is convinced her daughter is still alive and
insists: "I do not feel it is the end."
As the tormented mother pledged to continue searching
for Madeleine for the rest of her life, she told how she still feels the presence of her missing child.
Kate said:
"I do not think Madeleine is dead. Any mother would feel the same way. I believe Madeleine is out there and, at times,
I feel close to her."
Kate told how she visited the Portuguese resort of Praia da Luz, from where Madeleine
was snatched nearly four-and-a-half years ago, at least five times a year.
She revealed: "At first it was
too painful to go back there but I visit quite often now because I feel closer to Madeleine there."
Former
GP Kate, 43, spoke out to help launch her book in Brazil. The harrowing memoir, Madeleine, will go on sale there on Tuesday.
The book, published in the UK on Madeleine's eighth birthday in May, is a best-seller. Translations have been launched
in Portugal and Holland.
Kate hopes her 384-page account will help jog readers' memories and could lead to
a vital clue in the global search to find her.
Kate told Marie Claire magazine: "We've been living
in limbo since Madeleine disappeared. But there is still hope and we can't give up. I do not feel it is the end."
Speaking for the first time about a sighting in July of a Madeleine lookalike, she said: "It wasn't Madeleine
but it gives me strength that people are still looking for her."
Kate and heart consultant husband Gerry,
43, of Rothley, Leicestershire, had their hopes dashed after being shown photos of the girl seen in the Himalayan town of
Leh, India. Kate told the magazine's Brazil edition: "We still receive dozens of alleged sightings of Madeleine across
the world. It is heartbreaking not knowing where she is and it is still a struggle to see beyond tomorrow but we have to keep
looking. We will never give up."
Kate, who has six-year-old twins Sean and Amelie, told how she had grown
"much stronger" over the years and has dedicated her life to finding her eldest child. She admitted: "For a
long time I didn't allow myself to enjoy life but I feel more able to enjoy life now and I do it for Madeleine."
Kate's book will also be released in Germany this month, in Spain in October and Hungary in November. She said:
"There are still many questions that remain unanswered and readers may be able to answer. We believe that we will find
the key information which will help bring Madeleine back."
Every penny raised from sales of Kate's book
will be spent on the continuing search by private investigators.
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Former BBC Presenter Clarence Mitchell
joins Burson-Marsteller UK, 05 September 2011
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Former BBC Presenter Clarence Mitchell joins Burson-Marsteller UK Burson-Marsteller
News • 5th September 2011
London, 5 September, 2011
– Clarence Mitchell has joined Burson-Marsteller's London team where he becomes a Managing Director, providing strategic
counsel to corporate and public affairs clients and reporting to UK CEO Matt Carter.
Clarence Mitchell was most
recently Director of Media Strategy and Public Affairs at Lewis PR, offering clients strategic counsel across the issues and
crisis management and public affairs practices, a role he combined with his ongoing duties as official media spokesman for
Kate and Gerry McCann, whose daughter Madeleine went missing in Portugal in May 2007. Previously, he was a consultant with
Freud Communications.
Prior to that, he was Director of the UK Government's Media Monitoring Unit leading a
team that advised No 10 and all of the major Departments of State on how best to respond to the daily news agenda. Before
moving into Government Comms and PR, he was an on-air News Correspondent and Presenter with BBC News.
Commenting
on the hire, Matt Carter said: "Clarence has first-class experience in handling the media, as a BBC journalist, a government
media adviser and someone who's faced the cameras regularly on behalf of his clients. He's a great addition to B-M's
award-winning UK team"
Commenting on his new role with Burson-Marsteller, Clarence said: "I am absolutely
delighted to be joining such an established, forward thinking agency as Burson-Marsteller. With its truly global reach, impressive
client list and its innovative evidence-based approach to communications, I know it's an environment I will thrive in.
I'm excited by the campaign challenges to come."
About Burson-Marsteller UK
Burson-Marsteller UK (http://www.bursonmarsteller.co.uk/) established in 1967 is the European HQ of the global public relations and public affairs firm.
Reflecting London's
role as a world class business centre, the UK's capital city has become the leading market for global public relations
services providing an unrivalled opportunity to interact with and influence a diverse range of stakeholders. As such, Burson-Marsteller
UK is well placed to serve and grow its international client base of FTSE 100 and Fortune 500 companies leveraging London
as a gateway to the world.
For more information, please contact ;
Meera Thakkar Tel: 0207 300 6422 Email@ meera.thakkar@bm.com
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What's Wrong with: Burson-Marsteller? Corporate Watch
Magazine Issue 2 - Winter 1996
Burson Marsteller (BM) is a large and powerful public relations
company which is adept at creating a positive image for corporations involved in unethical business practices including human
rights violations, environmental destruction and animal-testing. Many of these companies have faced public scrutiny and even
convictions for their various activities.
'Crisis Management'
"When is
a disaster not a disaster? When it turns into a business opportunity... With good crisis management, a company can even ride
the bad publicity of multiple deaths and come out smelling of roses." - Pat Anderson, writing in the professional journal
Marketing Week, 22/4/94.
Disasters do happen. The best we can hope for is to learn from experience. This necessitates
a serious debate afterwards, and to be effective such a debate needs to be balanced. Corporations that spend vast amounts
on post-disaster PR are disrupting that crucial debate and evading responsibility. BM prides itself on being the leading 'crisis
management' PR company. It has done the PR for the following disasters:
In India in 1984, for US company Union
Carbide when its pesticide plant in Bhopal leaked more than 40 tonnes toxic gas. 2000 people were killed instantly; up to
15,000 have died since as a result of the disaster, and hundreds of thousands are suffering lung, eye and gastric complaints.
Tuberculosis incidence in Bhopal is 3 times the Indian average. Following BMs work, the Indian Supreme Court dropped all charges
of manslaughter against Union Carbide, although safety mechanisms at the plant were appallingly inadequate. The company has
now left India, leaving most of the responsibility with the Indian government.
In 1979, when Babcock and Wilcox's
nuclear reactor failed at Three Mile Island, the worst nuclear accident ever in the US. There are still over 2,000 lawsuits
pending.4
For the Exxon Corporation, following the Exxon-Valdez disaster in Alaska, one of the most devastating
oil spillages the world has ever seen.
In 1995, for Occidental Petroleum, Dow Chemicals and Shell in a legislation
battle in California. These chemical corporations are trying to avoid new legislation that would force them to clean the local
water supplies of DBCP, a soil fumigant pesticide that causes testicular cancer. 5
Working with Disreputable
Companies. Burson-Marsteller's corporate clients include :
BP Chemicals - In
1992, it was found that BP's Hull facility discharges twice the level of methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) - a chemical which
can cause genetic damage, foetal damage or birth defects at unsafe levels of exposure - into the water than the total amount
of MEK released in the United States.
Kerr McGee - owners of a uranium mine in the Navajo Nation,
New Mexico. Accused of paying low wages and not informing the workers about the hazardous effects of uranium. Deaths are being
recorded every month.
Malaysian Timber Industry Development Council - has felled vast areas of
tropical rainforest, particularly in the states of Sarawak and Sabah, threatening the livelihoods of the indigenous peoples
who lived there. BM has been hired to "repel falsehood and lies spread by evil-minded environmentalists." 7However,
even the pro-business Malaysian Government has reported that 5 states have over-logged8; and although the International Tropical
Timber Organisation warned the loggers in 1990 to cut their output to 9m m3/yr it has remained at 16-19m; and at the present
rate the primary forest will be finished in 7-8 years9.
Monsanto and Eli Lilly - both companies
produce the growth hormone BST to increase milk yields in cattle. It has been criticised for risk of infection in the cows,
the fact that there is already a milk surplus, and unknown effects of this hormone on human beings. Acting on this concern,
state legislators in Wisconsin, Minnesota, California and Vermont attempted to enforce labelling of milk produced with, and
containing, this hormone. Their efforts were thwarted by Burson-Marsteller acting on behalf of these companies.10
Pfizer - a pharmaceutical company accused in 1990 by the US Generic Pharmaceutical Industry of fraudulent and deceptive
practices for its failure to report severe side effects of its Feldene drug before it obtained US approval. Listed by the
Multinational Monitor as one of the ten worst companies in 1988 for supplying faulty heart-valves. At least 394 of these valves
ruptured killing 252 people by 1990. The company has also conducted extensive tests on animals, was listed by a US group as
one of the top fifteen corporate contributors to global pollution based on 1987 figures and had one of its plants listed by
Greenpeace as one of the ten worst polluters in the South East of England.
SmithKline Beecham - A
pharmaceutical and research company which, in the year to March 1991, exceeded its toxic waste discharge quota into the rivers
and sea more than 30 times. The company also owns its own animal testing facilities and has been accused of unnecessary cruelty
in housing its animals.
Unilever - food, chemical and household goods manufacturer. Implicated
in pollution of rivers in the UK and convicted for water pollution offences between 1/9/89 and 31/8/91. Owner of Birds
Eye Walls - a food manufacturer which admitted in 1991 to annually importing 30,000 tonnes of beef from Brazil (where
much grazing land is felled rainforest). In June 1989, 87 workers at the plant in Sao Paulo, Brazil were fired for occupying
the plant in an attempt to achieve better pay and conditions.
Other controversial companies which have recently
retained BM include:
Boots, Nestle, British Nuclear Fuels, Philip Morris, Coca-Cola, Proctor & Gamble,
Ford Motor Co.,Rhone-Poulenc, General Electric, Rorer, Glaxo-Wellcome, Scott Paper, Grand Metropolitan, Scottish Nuclear,
J Sainsbury, Shell.
Also, BM was hired by the Argentinian military junta led by Gen. Jorge Videla, which
seized power in a coup d'_tat in 1976, to improve the country's "international image, especially for fostering
foreign investment ... through projecting an aura of stability for the nation, its government and its economy". During
Videla's reign, 35,000 people 'disappeared' and thousands of political prisoners were tortured. Videla is now
serving a life sentence for murder.-
In 1996, BM was hired by the Indonesian government, which has one of the worst
human rights records in the world and has been widely condemned for committing genocide in East Timor.13
Forming Industry 'Front Groups'
Increasingly the companies in an industry are uniting to form
front groups to influence public opinion and legislation. These groups often give themselves 'green' sounding names:
while pretending to show their concern and thus make a serious contribution to the environmental debate, they are in fact
simply furthering the interests of the companies funding them. Indeed the aim is usually to relax environmental standards
in order to cut their costs.
In the early '90s, Burson-Marsteller was instrumental in setting up the Business
Council for Sustainable Development (BCSD), whose members include Chevron, Volkswagen, Ciba-Geigy, Mitsubishi, Dow Chemicals,
Du Pont and Shell.14 Their press release said: "In a major new initiative on the future development and use of the world's
natural resources, over 40 top world business leaders have joined forces in the form of an international organisation to propose
new policies and actions on the sustainable development of the earth's environment."15
The BCSD was headed
by Stephen Schmidheiny, a Swiss billionaire industrialist; and also a close friend of the secretary-general of the UN council
on environment and development (UNCED). Substantial representations were made by the BCSD to UNCED's 1992 Earth Summit
in Rio; with the result that proposals drawn up by the UN's own centre for trans-national corporations - concerning the
environmental impact of these large companies, and issues of corporate responsibility and accountability - were not discussed
or even circulated to delegates.16
In Europe, BM set up the Alliance for Beverage Cartons and the Environment,
in 'defence of the beverage carton against environmental and regulatory pressures'. Its purpose is to make disposable
cartons look environmentally friendly, and is sponsored by packaging interests such as Tetra Pak, Elopak, Bowater (now called
REXAM) and Weyerhauser.17
In the US, BM represents the Fur Information Council in its multi-million campaign to
combat 'animal extremists'.18
In Canada, the timber industry paid BM $1million to set up the British Columbia
Forest Alliance, which poses as a forest protection movement.
Burson-Marsteller's Methods
MEDIA: As a PR firm, Burson-Marsteller obviously has a lot of friends in the media. Anyone with enough money (eg.
large corporations) thus gets easy access through BM to public opinion, while those who have concerns other than the pursuit
of money (eg. victims of industrial disasters) find it much harder to get their view across.
BM is a joint partner
with Independent Television News (ITN) in the ownership of Corporate Television Network, which produces video press releases
for corporate clients. As ITN is actually a media news service, its venture with BM makes a mockery of the notion of independent
media.21
LOBBYING: Described by the Observer as 'compromising the independence of all-party
groups', BM has had a great deal of involvement in putting commercial interests inside the Palace of Westminster. When
a group of businessmen recently decided to throw their weight behind a campaign to abolish British Summer Time, they naturally
hired BM. Within weeks, BM had become the administrative secretariat of the supposedly 'independent' Daylight Extra
All-Party Group, and were using its name to drum up support among MPs for a Private Member's Bill. They eventually failed.22
SUMMONING 'GRASSROOTS' SUPPORT: Through use of strategic contacts, BM creates the appearance
of popular support for its campaigns. In blocking the BST legislation (Eli Lilly and Monsanto, above), BM formed a coalition
of businessmen, lobbyists, farmers, vets, executives of biotechnology companies, and so on. Faced with a constant barrage
of letters, petitions and media actions, the legislators had no choice but to back down. Burson-Marsteller's control of
both the media and key decision-makers is worrying, particularly because it is not surprising.
HIRING THIRD
PARTIES: BM has also been accused of paying academics to write articles supporting its campaigns, without of course
declaring their interests.
Specialisation in Environmental Issues
To quote BM's own literature: "When you need help on
environmental issues, you need environmental professionals... Burson-Marsteller offers a worldwide environmental team. Issue
experts. Lobbyists. Community relations counsellors. Technical advisors and media specialists." At $18m per year, BM
has a larger income from dealing with environmental issues than any other PR firm.2
References 1:
O'Dwyer's Directory of PR Firms, Spring 1993 2: ibid, May 1992 3: See reference 3. 4: A Dictionary
of the Environment, S Elsworth, 1990 5: Los Angeles Times, 17/10/95 6: Company info from ECRA, Multinational Monitor 7: "Defending the Earth", Human Rights Watch & Natural Resource Defence Council, 1992 8: AFP, Kuala Lumpur,
3/10/94 9: "Sarawak: the Struggle Continues", Rainforest Information Centre, 25/4/95 10: PR Watch, vol.1,
no.2, 1st quarter 1994 11: Public Relations Consultancy Yearbook, 1994 and 1996 12: Sultans of Sleaze, J Nelson,
1989 13: Observer, 8/12/96 14: "Changing Course", BCSD, 1992 15: New Catalyst, Summer 1993 16:
Ecologist, vol.22, no.4, 1992 17: "No Need to Worry", ACE, 7/8/90 18: 7 Days, 4/10/89 19: Pulp &
Propaganda, Canadian Forum, Jul/Aug 1994 20: Tribune Business News, 23/2/96 21: Observer, 10/9/95 22: Observer,
17/9/95 Many references originally found in Green Backlash by Andrew Rowell
Burson-Marsteller. 24-28
Bloomsbury Way. London WC1A 32PX. tel 0171 831 6262. fax 0171 404 2360
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PR: The dark history of spin
and its threat to genuine news The Independent
As the public-relations industry increasingly tries to dominate the media, it is not only contaminating journalism but
is itself reverting to its lowly propaganda origins, say David Miller and William Dinan
Monday,
14 April 2008
- Extract -
If you haven't heard of National Propaganda, that may
be because its story features in virtually no history books - perhaps a testament to the power of propaganda to manage and
manipulate how we see the world. Corporate propaganda did not come to Britain as an export from the US, but arose here at
the same time and for the same reasons - as a defence by the powerful of their interests. Today it is called public relations,
a term invented by early spin doctors when propaganda got a bad name.
PR today attempts to control the political
agenda by attempting to dominate the whole information environment so that alternatives to the market seem nonsensical or
minority pursuits. The most important way in which it operates is by direct influence on the political élite as opposed
to influence on public opinion.
The aim is to ensure that almost everything that the political class hears will
come from apparently independent institutes, think tanks, scientists, journalists or civil society. In reality, many of these
sources are put in place by the PR industry. The aim is to undermine or marginalise independent journalism, control decision-making,
and lastly, mystify and misinform the public. In doing so, PR is bringing about the death of genuine news.
The
PR industry has even taken over sections of the media. An early example was the 1995 joint venture between ITN and Burson-Marsteller,
one of the most controversial PR firms in the world. Corporate Television Networks, which still exists, was, for a while,
based at ITN headquarters, with full access to ITN archives, and made films for Shell and other companies.
-
End of extract -
Professor David Miller and Dr William Dinan lecture at the University of Strathclyde. They run
www.spinwatch.org, and recently published A Century of Spin (Pluto Press)
|
Burson-Marsteller snaps up Lewis PR's Clarence Mitchell as MD, 05 September
2011
|
Burson-Marsteller snaps up Lewis PR's Clarence Mitchell as MD PR Week
Sara Luker 05 September 2011, 8:29am
Clarence Mitchell,
the ex-BBC presenter famous for being the spokesman for Madeleine McCann's parents, is the new MD of Burson-Marsteller.
|
Clarence Mitchell: joins Burson-Marsteller |
Mitchell will report to UK CEO Matt Carter and will provide strategic counsel to corporate and public
affairs clients.
Carter told PRWeek: 'Clarence has first-class experience in handling the media, as a BBC journalist,
a government media adviser and someone who's faced the cameras regularly on behalf of his clients. He's a great addition
to B-M's UK team.'
Mitchell was most recently director of media strategy and public affairs at Lewis PR,
a role he combined with his duties as official media spokesman for Kate and Gerry McCann. Before that he was a consultant
with Freud Communications.
Mitchell left Lewis PR in July as reported in PRWeek.
Mitchell also held
the position of director of the Conservative Party's Election Media Monitoring Unit, reporting directly to director of
communications Andy Coulson.
Before moving into government comms and PR, he was a news correspondent and presenter
with BBC News.
He said of the move: 'With Burson-Marsteller's global reach and evidence-based approach
to communications, I know it's an environment I will thrive in. I'm excited by the campaign challenges to come.'
|
Child Bereavement and Trauma Service:
CHUMS Annual Conference, 03 October 2011
|
03 October 2011
06-07 October 2011 Letchworth Hall Hotel, Letchworth
This two day conference is relevant to all professionals working with children
and will include networking opportunities.
Day 1: Alicia Sims Franklin, Grief Inc., USA 'Grief is
not "one sixe fits all": Exploring the ways in which children, adolescents and their families grieve differently
Day 2: Kate and Gerry McCann Gerry and Kate describe how they have helped their children try to understand
and cope with Madeleine's disappearance whilst trying to understand and cope with it themselves.
Workshops
are available on both days, choose from the four options below.
Workshop 1: Alicia Sims Franklin, 'Taming the
Tornado Within' Focusing on the connections between children's anger, unresolved grief and violence
Workshop 2: Kate Cairns, 'Secondary trauma' Exploring the impact of living and working with traumatised children
Workshop 3: Emma Chilvers 'Managing Energy' A Whole Life Balance, Taking car of yourself
Workshop
4: 'Looking at self-harm' Why young people do it. What can we do to help?
For further information
and to book, contact CHUMS at: Tel: 01582 707469 Email: paula.fensome@luton-pct.nhs.uk
|
McCann libel trial hearings to start
in February 2012, 11 October 2011
|
By Astro 11 October 2011
The civil complaint filed by the McCanns against Gonçalo Amaral, over his book "Maddie - A Verdade
da Mentira" (The Truth of the Lie) will start to be tried in February 2012.
The first two hearings
have been scheduled for the 9th and 10th of February, 2012, at 9.30 a.m., at the Civil Court of Lisbon.
The defence
fund that supports Mr Amaral by helping to finance the legal expenses related to this trial, is still in operation. Donations
are very welcome. Please refer to Projecto Justiça Gonçalo Amaral for contributions. Thank you.
|
What Kate McCann's secret diary
does not tell, 24 October 2011
|
By Aníbal Malvar 24/10/2011
(06:00h) With thanks to Ines for translation
Kate McCann has been in Madrid this week to present the book "Madeleine", based
upon her diaries and in which she exhaustively describes the police and personal efforts to recover her daughter. On 3rd May
2007, Maddie McCann aged four, disappeared whilst sleeping with her twin siblings in a chalet in Praia da Luz, in the Algarve.
Since then, nothing has been heard about the girl.
The police had asked Kate McCann to try to reconstruct in detail
and in writing all her activities, meetings, conversations, phone calls and visits, during the days previous to Madeleine's
disappearance. Including the tiniest or most trivial detail. They assured her that this memory exercise would help the investigators
follow the leads that might have appeared to her as having gone unnoticed. Kate McCann was used to, since her teenage years,
taking up her exercise book every day and writing some impressions and details about her life. In other words, she kept
a diary. However, this was not told to the Portuguese police. She waited for the arrival of the British intelligence service
to deliver this more intimate diary. When the existence of this book came to light, the Portuguese police requested a copy
from the British. It was denied. A gesture that muddied even further the already tense relations between the Portuguese and
British investigators who were collaborating in the search for the girl.
Gonçalo Amaral had spent six years
heading the Portimão Criminal Investigation Department when he was put in charge of the investigation. A few days before
being taken off the case "due to political pressure" according to his own words, Amaral phoned me early in the morning
in my Portimão hotel. It was the 12th September 2007 and until then, the Portuguese officer had avoided any contact
with the press: "Justice is done in silence", he quoted Saint José to kindly evade any requests for interviews.
The meeting took place in a Brazilian owned cafeteria in Olhão. A dull and over lit place that would remain open until
dawn.
Amaral, who had charged the McCanns five days previously, arrived late, unshaven, his suit wrinkled and with
deep shadows under his eyes. He said he had not slept for days. His shabby appearance was one of the most recurrent arms used
by the British press to discredit him. In the UK defending the innocence of the McCann couple had become a question of patriotism,
the tabloids had gone to the lengths of qualifying the Portuguese officer as a dipsomaniac, a bumpkin and even as suspected
of being involved in a paedophile network. They did not pay any attention to Amaral who continued to insist on the theory
that Madeleine had suffered a domestic accident and that the parents had disposed of her body to avoid scandal: according
to Amaral's suspicions, the autopsy would have revealed that the McCanns had been sedating their hyperactive daughter
and that they had exceeded the dosage. Gerry McCann, a doctor by profession, was at the point of being named for an important
position in the British health service when the girl disappeared. A well-connected man with influence at the highest levels.
Although the Portuguese police had not had access to Kate McCann's diaries, Amaral knew of part of their content
due to press leaks. According to these leaks, Kate admitted in her writings that Maddie's hyperactivity would on occasions,
rile her. In any case, Amaral also doubted the veracity of what Kate had written, suggesting that the version of the diary
delivered to the British several weeks after the disappearance would have been later manipulated to hide evidence: "If
you take this book and write now that it is the 12th September and your impressions..., is that a diary or fiction?".
The line of investigation opened by Amaral and so dismissed by the British, is just a question of method: "Almost
90% of all missing children cases are the parents' responsibility," he says, referring to police statistics. But,
in this case, there were more elements of suspicion.
Firstly, the McCanns did not call the police immediately after
the disappearance. They first organised, together with the friends they were dining with that night, search patrols around
the resort. When they finally called the Portuguese police, the McCann apartment had been infested by amateur investigators
contaminating the scene of the events and making it difficult to obtain "clean" evidence. An unreasonable attitude
from educated and affluent persons. Any parent having the financial resources the McCanns had would have immediately considered
the possibility of a kidnapping with economic motives.
Furthermore, the media circus organised by the McCanns,
implied to Amaral the immediate "condemning to death" of the girl in the case that this was an abduction by a paedophile
network. The McCanns had clearly disregarded the recommendations for discretion made to them by the Portuguese police.
After having been removed from the case, a few days after our interview, Gonçalo Amaral requested early retirement
and left behind 28 years of his profession in order to write the book "Maddie. The Truth of the Lie". In a few days
more than 120,000 copies were sold. In the book, Amaral claims that Gerry McCann hid his daughter on the beach and, later,
with the help of accomplices, froze her body and disposed of it. Traces of blood appeared in the apartment and car boot of
the McCanns, but the police did not consider that there was conclusive proof to accuse the parents. Before the book "Truth
of the Lie" was printed, PJ inspector Paulo Pereira Cristóvao had already written "The Star of Madeleine",
a book in which he relates the investigation and maintains theories very similar to those defended by Amaral. This book also
had successful sales.
Now Kate McCann has just presented her book "Madeleine" in Madrid with the aim
of raising funds to continue searching for her daughter. Both the Portuguese and British police have abandoned the investigation.
The McCanns however, have insisted during these four years, contracting detectives who have followed false leads even to India
and offering a two million pound reward to anyone who provides true information leading to Madeleine's whereabouts.
Kate McCann's book has also been distributed in the UK and Portugal. Although "Madeleine" is partly
based on them, it does not include the diaries that were so zealously denied by the British police to Gonçalo Amaral,
whom, no longer a member of the police, continues to request publicly the re-opening of the case whenever he has the opportunity.
|
I'll never stop searching for Maddie,
says Kate McCann, 29 October 2011
|
I'll never stop searching for Maddie, says Kate McCann Daily Record
Oct 29 2011
THE mother of missing Madeleine McCann said yesterday she still wished she could "stop time".
Kate
McCann, who marked the fourth anniversary of Maddie's disappearance in May, said she and husband Gerry would not give
up on finding their little girl.
In a message on the Maddie search website, she wrote: "My grandparents always
said the years pass more quickly the older you get. It certainly feels that way.
"I still dream of being able
to stop time.
"Our only alternative, however, is to continue doing as much as we can to the best of our ability
to enhance the search for Madeleine. So that is what we'll do."
She added: "It is a big relief that
our Government finally agreed to a review. It will be lengthy and difficult but definitely a major step."
Maddie
was nearly four when she vanished from her family's holiday flat in Praia da Luz, Portugal, in 2007.
|
Kate Prout murder: Police prepare to search Redhill Farm, 21 November 2011
|
Kate Prout murder: Police prepare to search Redhill Farm BBC News
21 November 2011 Last updated at 08:13
Police are due to start searching farmland in Gloucestershire for the remains of murder victim Kate Prout.
On Friday her husband Adrian took police to Redhill Farm, Redmarley, to show them where he had buried
her body.
Prout was jailed for life in February 2010 for her murder following a trial. Police said he had now admitted
the killing.
A wooded area on the 276-acre farm remained under tight police guard during the weekend.
'Divorce settlement'
On Thursday, police said they had
received "significant" new information about the case.
Speaking then, Det Supt Simon Atkinson said Prout
had admitted to detectives that he murdered Mrs Prout - something which he had always denied - and has now suggested that
he disposed of her body on Redhill Farm.
Former teacher Mrs Prout disappeared the day after she asked her husband
for a £800,000 divorce settlement.
The last time anyone heard from her was on 5 November 2007 when she called
her bank, First Direct.
Prout, who owned a pipe-laying business and commercial pheasant shoot, had said he would
need to sell £1.2m Redhill Farm to pay the settlement.
Instead, he offered her £600,000 plus maintenance.
Prout reported his wife missing on 10 November. Her wallet and credit cards, shoes and clothes were all left behind.
------------------
Cadaver dog sniffed death in Prout home This Is Gloucestershire
Saturday, March 05, 2011
EVIDENCE of a dead body inside murdered Kate
Prout's home was discovered by a sniffer dog, it has emerged.
The "cadaver dog" homed in on an area
in the living room of the Redmarley home she shared with her husband Adrian Prout, who was convicted of her killing last year.
|
MURDERED: Kate Prout. |
An hour-long documentary on the murder case told how the dog,
which was specially trained to seek out dead bodies and where deaths occurred, concentrated on a specific spot in the living
room at Redhill Farm.
And for the first time another of Kate Prout's brothers, Ted Wakefield, spoke about the
case.
Appearing on the Crime and Investigation network's The Perfect Murder?, he said he told his
then-friend Prout that if he had done "something silly" he would "spend the rest of his life in jail, or always
looking over his shoulder".
Prout was convicted in January 2010 of killing Kate amid an acrimonious divorce
battle on Bonfire Night 2007. She wanted £800,000 from the sale of £1.2 million Redhill Farm but to keep it, Prout
offered her £600,000. On November 5 she vanished, without taking clothes, money, valuables or her car. Prout reported
her missing five days later, after another of her brothers, Richard Wakefield and her former partner David Edge persuaded
him to contact police.
After a massive search of the farm and surrounding countryside Gloucestershire Constabulary
found no evidence of Kate, 55, inside or outside the property.
There were no traces of blood, or signs of a struggle,
but the cadaver dog indicated to police that a dead body had been in the living room.
Gloucestershire Constabulary
drew together a mass of circumstantial evidence that pointed to Prout having strangled his wife with his bare hands and burying
her body.
A jury of 11 men and women found him guilty by a majority of 10 to one and he was sentenced to life in
prison. He must serve a minimum of 18 years.
His family continues to protest his innocence but her family has pleaded
with Prout to reveal where his wife is so they can give her a decent burial.
The programme, part of the channel's
Nightmare in Suburbia series, also featured Detective Chief Inspector Neil Kelly who led the investigation, Kate's
brother Richard Wakefield and his wife Linda.
"I thought it was quite a good programme in how it put the case
over," said Richard Wakefield, who lives in Far Oakridge, near Stroud.
"It was just the truth. At least
everybody can see what really happened."
■ The Perfect Murder? will be screened on the Crime
and Investigation channel again, tomorrow at 8pm and Monday at 3am.
----------------
We are sure Kate was murdered
- detectives This Is Gloucestershire (no longer online)
Tuesday, January
15, 2008
Police now believe missing farmer Kate Prout was murdered.
Officers have refused
to rule out the possibility the 55-year-old from Redmarley may have come to harm.
They say the possibility she
has been murdered is stronger than ever.
Although investigations at her Redhill Farm home finished a fortnight
ago it is understood specialist sniffer dogs used in the search for missing four-year-old Madeleine McCann in Portugal have
been used in the investigation and found evidence of Mrs Prout's death.
Det Supt Neil Kelly said specialist
dogs had been used but could not comment on what was found.
Mrs Prout disappeared on November 5 last year. Mrs
Prout vanished from her home on Bonfire Night, but her husband Adrian did not report her missing until November 10.
A 45-year-old man, believed to be Mr Prout, was arrested in connection with the case and remains on police bail.
Acting Det Supt Neil Kelly said that Gloucestershire Police had gathered no evidence to suggest she was still alive.
He said: "A very thorough search of the land surrounding Mrs Prout's home has been concluded but the investigation
remains very much open. Despite exhaustive efforts, however, we have unfortunately not discovered any evidence to suggest
that Mrs Prout is alive and that she disappeared of her own volition.
"We fear, therefore, that either some
harm has befallen her accidentally or that she has been murdered. Had the former occurred, we believe it likely that she would
have been discovered by now, and as a result, we fear more strongly than ever that she has been murdered."
|
McCanns Get Court Date For £1m Cop
Lawsuit, 11 December 2011
|
McCanns Get Court Date For £1m Cop Lawsuit Sky News
|
The McCanns are seeking at least 1.2m euros (£1m) in damages from Goncalo Amaral |
3:48pm UK, Sunday December 11, 2011
Gerry and Kate McCann's £1m lawsuit against the Portuguese police officer who bungled the hunt for
missing Madeleine will be heard early next year, it is understood.
The civil case against Goncalo Amaral - who
was in charge of the Madeleine investigation for five months before he was thrown off the case - will take place in Lisbon
on February 9 and 10, according to a source close to the couple.
The 52-year-old former detective has made a fortune
selling a book and TV documentary claiming the young British girl is dead - and wrongly claiming her parents staged a cover-up.
|
In their writ the McCanns describe Mr Amaral as 'self-obsessed' |
The McCanns have always strongly denied his allegation and in a 36-page
writ lodged in June 2009, they accuse Mr Amaral of libel and breaching their human rights.
The couple, from Rothley
in Leicestershire, will not give evidence themselves but are expected to attend court.
"Mr Amaral has made
the McCann family's life hell and he has made himself rich in the process," a family source said.
"Kate
and Gerry want to stop him spouting his malicious lies about them and to stop him profiting from their pain, and the only
way to do that is by going to court."
In their writ, the McCanns describe the now-retired detective as a self-obsessed,
manipulative money-grabber with no morals.
They claim Mr Amaral's repeated insistence that their daughter is
dead discouraged people from looking for her.
The couple also describe in detail the pain and anguish they say
Mr Amaral caused them by repeatedly smearing them - saying his slurs left them "totally destroyed".
|
Madeleine disappeared in May 2007 - only days before her fourth birthday |
The McCanns are seeking at least 1.2m euros (£1m) in damages
from the ex-policeman, and if they win the case the money will go towards the search for Madeleine.
Mr Amaral's
book, titled The Truth About The Lie, was translated into six languages and has sold more than 333,000 copies worldwide.
It was also made into a 50-minute TV documentary.
Madeleine disappeared on May 3, 2007, only days before
her fourth birthday.
She had been left sleeping in a holiday apartment as her parents dined with friends in a nearby
tapas bar in the resort of Praia da Luz in southern Portugal.
The country's attorney general Jose Pinto Monteiro
has cleared the McCanns of any wrongdoing over Madeleine's disappearance.
|
Missing People: Carol Service, 12 December
2011
|
Missing People: Carol Service Missing People Facebook
Brenda Blethyn OBE and Sir Trevor McDonald OBE light a candle
to remember the missing with the McCanns. — at St Martin-in-the-Fields.
|
My Chloroform: In Your Eyes, 17 December
2011
|
My Chloroform: In Your Eyes soundcloud.com
Taken from My Chloroforms' EP 'Worlds Collide'.
75% of all download sales for this song will be donated to the 'Find Madeleine' appeal - http://www.findmadeleine.com
In Your Eyes is currently available to purchase from My Chloroform's Facebook and ReverbNation STORE pages (copy
and paste links into your browser): http://www.facebook.com/MyChloroform?sk=app_112652562318 http://www.reverbnation.com/store/index/artist_593887
|
A hurt which never goes away for the McCanns,
even at Christmas time, 17 December 2011
|
A hurt which never goes away for the McCanns, even at Christmas
time Daily Mirror
|
Madeleine McCann |
by Fiona Phillips 17/12/2011
DESPITE the fact that Christmas now seems to start in October, a new report claims we didn't actually feel
"Christmassy" until Thursday this week.
Well, bully for us, because while we're stressing out over
presents, trees, decorations, food and the lack of money to buy it all with, there are some for whom Christmas is a damn sight
more painful.
On Monday I went to the Missing People Christmas Carol Service, dedicated to the memory of those
who won't be home for Christmas and, in some cases, haven't been for years.
I sat next to Kate and Gerry
McCann, whom I've had the pleasure of meeting on several occasions.
I don't need to tell you that
their eldest daughter Madeleine has been missing for over four years now, her presence replaced by a continuing ache.
It's hard to utter throwaway salutations on seeing someone again when you know their suffering never ceases. A
simple phrase like "how are you?" can suddenly sound like the elephant in the room, when the answer "how the
hell do you think they are?" booms away inside your head.
They must know there's a sense of "what
to say/ what not to say" when encountering them, because the McCanns are great at making people feel comfortable.
Gerry has got a brilliant sense of humour, which must have been his secret weapon during the years following Madeleine's
disappearance. That and his obvious love for Kate, whose hand he held throughout the service.
We talked about
Madeleine and of how her disappearance is very much a part of her twin brother and sister, Sean and Amelie's, lives.
Heartbreakingly, Gerry told me that one of the six-year-olds had said: "Will it be a good Christmas this year,
even though Madeleine's still not home?"
It's hard to sing a Christmas carol when someone has told
you that, let alone to stand at a lectern and deliver a heart-tugging reading when you're the one living the nightmare.
You could hear the profound silence as Kate read words from The Beacon by Simon Armitage: "... somewhere
out there there has to be life, the distance only a matter of time, a world like our own, its markings and shades as
uniquely formed as a daughter's eye, distinctly flecked, undeniably hers, looking back this way through the miles and
years..."
So while most of us are looking forward to spending time with loved ones next weekend, just imagine
what it must be like to live Christmas in a never-ending limbo.
|
News of the World made hush payment
of £125K to McCanns, 17 December 2011
|
News of the World made hush payment of £125K to
McCanns The Guardian
Confidential deal towards search fund for Madeleine was part of apology for tabloid's publication of mother Kate's
diary extracts
Daniel Boffey Saturday 17 December 2011 13.48 GMT
The News of the World paid £125,000 to the fund
supporting the search for Madeleine McCann as part of an apology for publishing Kate McCann's diaries – on condition
that the terms of the deal remained secret.
The payment was made after the missing girl's parents expressed
their outrage at the story, which Kate McCann said made her feel "mentally raped". All the parties involved in the
negotiations over the payment, which was agreed in September 2008, were asked to sign a confidentiality agreement hiding the
scale of the newspaper's culpability.
The payment was made despite claims by the defunct newspaper's editor
at the Leveson inquiry last week that he believed he had had the full support of the McCanns to publish. Colin Myler, who
edited the NoW from 2007 until it closed this year, told the inquiry he had received repeated assurances from his
head of news, Ian Edmondson, that the McCanns' spokesman, Clarence Mitchell, supported publication – a claim which
has been strenuously denied.
Myler told the inquiry that he subsequently ran an apology and paid a "substantial
sum" because "he felt very bad that she didn't know". However, the Observer has learned that the
NoW initially tried to minimise the compensation. A source at News International, the owner of the newspaper, said
there were hours of negotiations between the newspaper's lawyers and Carter-Ruck, the solicitors hired by the McCanns,
in the days following publication of the story on 14 September 2008.
A deal was finally struck in which a £125,000
payment was agreed, but all parties were obliged to sign agreements that they would not talk about the size of the compensation.
Last night Kate and Gerry McCann's spokesman and News International declined to comment.
The Leveson inquiry
into the media will hear this week from former NoW sports journalist Matt Driscoll, who was awarded almost £800,000
for unfair dismissal in April 2007 while on long-term sick leave for stress-related depression following a campaign of bullying
provoked by the newspaper's then editor, Andy Coulson.
It will also hear via video link from Piers Morgan,
former editor of the Daily Mirror and the NoW, who now works for CNN in New York. At 28, Morgan was appointed
editor of the NoW, making him the youngest tabloid newspaper editor in history. He was editor of the Daily Mirror
for more than 10 years, but was sacked in 2004 after the newspaper conceded that photos it published apparently showing British
soldiers abusing an Iraqi were fake.
Morgan claimed in a GQ magazine interview in 2007 that phone hacking
was "widespread" and that "loads of newspaper journalists were doing it" when Clive Goodman and Glenn
Mulcaire were jailed in January of that year.
Asked in the interview whether he knew about voicemail interception
while he was editor of NoW, Morgan said: "Well, I was there in 1994-95, before mobiles were used very much,
and that particular trick wasn't known about. I can't get too excited about it, I must say. It was pretty well known
that if you didn't change your pin code when you were a celebrity who bought a new phone, then reporters could ring your
mobile, tap in a standard factory setting number and hear your messages. That is not, to me, as serious as planting a bug
in someone's house, which is what some people seem to think was going on."
In 2006 Morgan wrote an article
for the Daily Mail claiming that he was played a tape of a message Paul McCartney left on the mobile phone of Heather
Mills. "The couple had clearly had a tiff, Heather had fled to India, and Paul was pleading with her to come back,"
he wrote. "He sounded lonely, miserable and desperate, and even sang We Can Work It Out into the answer-phone."
---------------------
Change of header:
McCann fund received
£125,000 from News of the World
|
McCanns thank supporters for help, 21 December
2011
|
McCanns thank supporters for help Grantham Journal
Published on Wednesday 21 December 2011 19:09 [Press Association]
The
parents of missing Leicestershire girl Madeleine McCann have thanked supporters for their help, saying they will move into
2012 with "renewed energy and continued hope".
In a message on the Find Madeleine website, Kate and Gerry
McCann said they had ended the year on a positive note, with the launch of the Government's Missing Children and Adults'
Strategy earlier this month.
And last week, Spanish private detectives claimed to have handed Scotland Yard "important
leads" in the search for the couple's daughter. Madeleine was nearly four when she went missing from her family's
holiday flat in Praia da Luz in the Algarve on May 3 2007 as her parents dined with friends nearby.
Writing on
their website on Wednesday, Mr and Mrs McCann said: "It's Christmas - again. A time of mixed emotions for our family
and many others in similar positions around the world. A time to hold together. Thank you to all our supporters for your help
throughout the year and for remaining united with us in our longing and determination to find Madeleine.
"The
year has ended on a positive note. Our search for Madeleine and the Metropolitan Police review of the case are progressing
well. In addition, this December saw a landmark event for the protection of, and support for, missing children and their families
left behind.
"The Government's Missing Children and Adults' Strategy aims to reduce the number of
people who go missing; to protect the missing whilst they are away, and to give families access to support, similar to victims
of crime."
They said the strategy followed 12 months of campaigning by individuals and organisations such
as the charity Missing People.
"Thank you to everyone who supported this campaign and influenced this significant
development," their message added. This Christmas, please keep Madeleine and all missing loved ones and their families
in your thoughts and prayers. Thank you. The support you give enables us to move into 2012 with renewed energy and continued
hope."
Last week, Spanish private detectives claimed they had handed Scotland Yard up to eight "very
important leads" in the search for Madeleine. Sources said four Metropolitan Police officers held talks with Barcelona
firm Metodo 3, which investigated her disappearance on behalf of the family.
A Scotland Yard spokesman refused
to confirm the meeting took place and family spokesman Clarence Mitchell said: "Kate and Gerry will simply not be commenting
whilst the Metropolitan Police review of Madeleine's case is under way."
|
Xmas 'jigsaw poster' bid to trace
Madeleine McCann, 22 December 2011
|
Xmas 'jigsaw poster' bid to trace Madeleine McCann
Daily Star
By Jerry Lawton 22nd December
2011
MADELEINE McCann's parents say they have new hope, thanks to a UK police search for their
daughter.
And Kate and Gerry McCann posted a jigsaw picture of Maddie on their website with the plea:
"Do you hold the missing piece of the puzzle?"
The doctors, both 43, said Christmas was "a time
of mixed emotions" for them but insisted they would "hold together".
On the findmadeleine.com website
they said: "The year has ended on a positive note.
"Our search and the Metropolitan Police review of
the case are progressing well."
The couple also welcomed the introduction of the Government's Missing
Children And Adults' Strategy to reduce the number of people who disappear, and support those left behind.
Madeleine,
then three, vanished from a holiday apartment in the Portuguese resort of Praia da Luz in May 2007. Portuguese police failed
to solve the case.
But now Scotland Yard detectives are reviewing the investigation following a request from Prime
Minister David Cameron.
----------------
Daily Star says... Daily Star
Prayer for McCanns
By Daily Star reporter 22nd December
2011
THE parents of missing Madeleine McCann will move into 2012 with "renewed energy and continued
hope".
In an optimistic message, Kate and Gerry said they had ended the year on a positive note.
And while it is a time of "mixed emotions" they remain "determined" to find their missing girl.
They said: "This Christmas, please keep Madeleine and all missing loved ones and their families in your thoughts
and prayers.
"Thank you to all our supporters for your help throughout the year and for remaining united with
us."
Hear, hear.
Let's hope 2012 finally brings a breakthrough in this terrible case.
Because the McCanns have suffered for coming up to five long years.
Their unwavering hope is a beacon to us all
in troubled times.
They deserve a break.
Some good news that delivers the happiest of Christmases.
The nation prays for them.
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Do you hold the missing piece? McCanns release
jigsaw image of Madeleine as they speak of 'continued hope' at Christmas, 22 December 2011
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Do you hold the missing piece? McCanns release jigsaw image
of Madeleine as they speak of 'continued hope' at Christmas Daily Mail
By Katie Silver Last updated at 7:37 AM on 22nd December 2011
The
parents of missing Madeleine McCann today thanked supporters for their help, saying they will move into 2012 with 'renewed
energy and continued hope'.
In a message on the Find Madeleine website, Kate and Gerry McCann said: 'It's
Christmas - again. A time of mixed emotions for our family and many others in similar positions around the world. A time to
hold together.'
They added that they had ended the year on a positive note, with the launch of the Government's
Missing Children and Adults' Strategy earlier this month.
Still, the distressed parents appealed for new information, imploring:
'Do you hold the missing piece of the puzzle?'
And last week, Spanish private detectives claimed to have
handed Scotland Yard 'important leads' in the search for the couple's daughter.
Madeleine was nearly
four when she went missing from her family's holiday flat in Praia da Luz in the Algarve on May 3 2007 as her parents
dined with friends nearby.
Writing on their website today, Mr and Mrs McCann said:
'Thank you to
all our supporters for your help throughout the year and for remaining united with us in our longing and determination to
find Madeleine.
'Our search for Madeleine and the Metropolitan Police review of the case are progressing well.
'In addition, this December saw a landmark event for the protection
of, and support for, missing children and their families left behind.
'The Government's Missing Children
and Adults' Strategy aims to reduce the number of people who go missing; to protect the missing whilst they are away,
and to give families access to support, similar to victims of crime.'
They said the strategy followed 12 months of campaigning by individuals
and organisations such as the charity Missing People.
'Thank you to everyone who supported this campaign and
influenced this significant development,' their message added.
'This Christmas, please keep Madeleine and
all missing loved ones and their families in your thoughts and prayers. Thank you.
'The support you give enables
us to move into 2012 with renewed energy and continued hope.'
Last week, Spanish private detectives claimed
they had handed Scotland Yard up to eight 'very important leads' in the search for Madeleine.
Sources said
four Metropolitan Police officers held talks with Barcelona firm Metodo 3, which investigated her disappearance on behalf
of the family.
Investigator Francisco Marco Fernandez told Spanish TV officers had
travelled to Spain to pick up around 30 boxes of documents.
A Scotland Yard spokesman refused to confirm the meeting
took place and family spokesman Clarence Mitchell said: 'Kate and Gerry will simply not be commenting whilst the Metropolitan
Police review of Madeleine's case is under way.
'They remain pleased that the Met team is continuing its
work and that progress is being made.'
The Metropolitan Police force has said there would be no limits in its
re-examination of the search.
Police have travelled to Portugal three times in connection with
the fresh review and a total of 30 people are now working on the force's Operation Grange.
The review prompted
criticism when it was launched in May, with politicians expressing concerns that it would divert resources from other crime
victims.
It was sparked after a request from Home Secretary Theresa May supported by Prime Minister David Cameron.
Portuguese detectives, helped by officers from Leicestershire Police, carried out a massive investigation into Madeleine's
disappearance.
But the official inquiry was formally shelved in July 2008 and since then no police force has been
actively looking for the missing child.
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2011 Review: Liverpool Echo/Leicester
Mercury, 27/28 December 2011
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2011 review: Paddy Shennan reports on some of the events
that made ECHO headlines between January and June Liverpool Echo
by Paddy Shennan Dec 27 2011
- Extract -
JUNE
(...)
The chances of finding missing Madeleine McCann were improving after Scotland Yard was called in
to review the investigation, according to her mum, Kate.
(...)
----------------------
2011 remembered in
Leicestershire - May and June Leicester Mercury
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
- Extract -
May 2011: A sad anniversary for the McCann family, while in sport Coalville have a big day out in London
The month of May brought with it the anniversary that Kate and Gerry McCann prayed they would never see – four years
since the disappearance of their daughter, Madeleine.
Later in the month, Kate McCann released her book, giving
her account of how the little girl vanished during a family holiday.
It told of the support the couple received
from villagers in Rothley and how they attempted to bring back some kind of normality to the lives of her two younger children,
Sean and Amelie.
(...)
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Bestselling books of 2011: the top 5,000
listed, 29 December 2011
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Bestselling books of 2011: the top 5,000 listed The Guardian
Nielsen's bestselling books of 2011 are dominated by paperbacks and elderly novels. See what came top
Posted by Simon Rogers Thursday 29 December 2011 08.30 GMT
- Extract -
Data summary
--------------
The top-1,000 selling books of 2011
--------------
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Pos.
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Title
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Author
|
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Volume
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Value, £
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1
|
One Day#
|
Nicholls, David
|
Hodder Paperback
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935,355
|
5,157,015.10
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(...)
|
|
|
|
|
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18
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Madeleine: Our Daughter's Disappearance and the Continuing Search for Her
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McCann, Kate
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Bantam Press
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246,939
|
2,504,671.44
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With thanks
to Nigel at
McCann Files
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