|
Local resident 'Nana' holds a sign: 'Dig up the lies not Luz' |
02 June 2014: British detectives arrive
in Praia da Luz to begin searching an area of scrubland known locally as 'The Mound'. The area is cordoned off as
detectives plot the terrain ahead of possible excavations.
However, the move is not welcomed by many local residents,
including the mayor of Praia da Luz, coming as it does on the first day of the tourist season.
British police to start latest phase
of Madeleine McCann hunt, 02 June 2014
|
British police to start latest phase of Madeleine McCann
hunt
Daily ExpressBritish police will begin the latest phase in the hunt for missing Madeleine McCann today by excavating a number
of sites in the Algarve.
By: Michael PickardPublished: Mon, June 2, 2014
Detectives are flying to Praia da Luz where Madeleine, three,
vanished seven years ago in a new search for clues. Officers will use radar penetration equipment to look for signs
of soil disturbance while mechanical diggers will carry out full excavations. Trained sniffer dogs will also be used to search
for human remains. The main target is a fenced-off wasteland area the size of three football pitches 100 yards from the Ocean
Club apartment where her family was staying. There were plans to build a new Irish-backed holiday hotel complex
on the vacant site until the project was shelved after the economy in Ireland collapsed. Three separate search
warrants have been submitted to Portuguese Attorney-General's office and the investigation team is now awaiting final
permission to start work The new search operation, which could last up to a week, was instigated by Prime Minister
David Cameron after Portuguese police failed to find Madeleine. She went missing on May 3, 2007, while her parents
Kate and Gerry were having dinner with friends at a nearby tapas restaurant. Three separate search warrants have
been submitted to Portuguese Attorney-General’s office and the investigation team is now awaiting final permission to
start work. The Metropolitan Police declined to comment yesterday. But last month, Assistant Commissioner Mark
Rowley said there would be a "substantial phase of activity involving Portuguese police with British police in support". The Scotland Yard team also intends to interview eight Portuguese nationals. The costs of the work will be met by
Scotland Yard.
----------------
Updated article (overwriting article above):
Maddie
McCann: Police seal off area to dig Daily Express
BRITISH police probing the disappearance of Madeleine McCann have reportedly cordoned off an area in Portugal
before they begin digging.
By: Max Evans Published: Mon, June 2, 2014
Detectives have flown to Praia da Luz where Maddie, three, vanished
seven years ago in a new search for clues.
Officers have identified a number of potential search sites near to
where she went missing while on holiday with her family in 2007.
The trail has lead investigators to scrubland
close to the apartment where the McCanns had been staying at the time, according to reports.
The site was previously
an open area but is now scheduled for development.
Maddie's parents Kate and Gerry McCann are not believed to have
travelled to Portugal as part of the new investigations.
During the latest round of searches in Portugal, Officers
will use radar penetration equipment to look for signs of soil disturbance while mechanical diggers will carry out full excavations.
Trained sniffer dogs will also be used to search for human remains. The main target is a fenced-off wasteland area
the size of three football pitches 100 yards from the Ocean Club apartment where her family was staying.
There
were plans to build a new Irish-backed holiday hotel complex on the vacant site until the project was shelved after the economy
in Ireland collapsed.
Three separate search warrants have been submitted to Portuguese Attorney-General's office.
The new search operation, which could last up to a week, was instigated
by Prime Minister David Cameron after Portuguese police failed to find Madeleine.
She went missing on May 3, 2007,
while her parents were having dinner with friends at a nearby tapas restaurant.
The Metropolitan Police declined
to comment on the operation. But last month, Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley said there would be a "substantial phase
of activity involving Portuguese police with British police in support".
The Scotland Yard team also intends
to interview eight Portuguese nationals. The costs of the work will be met by Scotland Yard.
|
'Come and dig up my garden'
says mother of cleared Maddie suspect, 02 June 2014
|
'Come and dig up my garden' says mother of cleared
Maddie suspect
Daily StarA MUM whose son was cleared as a suspect in Madeleine McCann's disappearance welcomed the new police search. By Jerry Lawton / Published 2nd June
2014
Jenny Murat told British detectives: "Come and dig up my
garden if you think it will help your search."
Her son Robert Murat, 40, has been probed then eliminated as
an official suspect – or arguido – by Portuguese police.
She added: "They won't find a thing
but if they need to do it as part of their investigation they're welcome.
"That poor girl's parents
need some answers after seven years."
British ex-pat Jenny, 78, lives just 100 yards away from the holiday
flat in Portugal's Praia da Luz where Maddie vanished. She said Scotland Yard had not been in contact yet.
She
was speaking as British and Portuguese police prepare to dig up parts of the resort.
She added: "I've
had it all before when my son Robert was living here and now I'm thinking: 'Not again.'
"But if
it helps police rule out a certain scenario, let it be. We've got nothing to hide."
She added: "I've
been away in England for a while but I'm home now and my garden's overgrown and full of weeds."
She
said police had originally searched her home and garden in July 2007, just two months after the then three-year-old vanished
as her parents dined nearby. She said: "I remember it only too well.
"There were six policemen with sniffer
dogs all over the place."
She insists the new dig will anger locals adding: "They feel it could ruin
our tourism industry."
|
Madeleine McCann: British police to meet
Portuguese counterparts as digging set to start at resort where she disappeared, 02 June 2014
|
Madeleine McCann: British police to meet Portuguese counterparts
as digging set to start at resort where she disappeared
Daily Mirror
Jun 02, 2014 01:19 | By Martin Fricker
A forensic archaeologist, sniffer dogs and ground-penetrating radar are all set to be used in the operation
in Praia da Luz
British police are expected to meet their Portuguese counterparts
today to finalise details of a search that could provide clues to the fate of Madeleine McCann.
With detectives
ready to scour three areas close to where Madeleine vanished in May, 2007, it raises fears for parents Kate and Gerry that
evidence will be found that their daughter is dead.
It is understood a forensic archaeologist, sniffer dogs and
ground-penetrating radar will be used in the operation in Praia da Luz.
Diggers from nearby Lagos will arrive at
the sites later this week.
The main targets of the searches are a fenced-off, vacant building lot, wasteland on
a hill overlooking the resort's beach and another site outside the resort.
Portuguese police will not take
part in the new searches, though a senior officer will oversee the operation.
The Scotland Yard team also hopes
to interview eight Portuguese nationals, though it is not clear if they are regarded as suspects or witnesses.
Former
GP Kate, 46, and heart specialist Gerry, 45, from Rothley, Leics, are staying away from the resort while ground operations
go ahead.
A source said: "This is a critical time in the British investigation and could provide the big breakthrough
in the case.
"Obviously there is the chance her body could be found.
"That is a nightmare
scenario for her family, but it would also bring closure.
"They understandably have to remain positive and
assume Madeleine is alive, but the dig raises the possibility of finding evidence that she is not."
|
Madeleine Cops Seal Off Praia Da Luz Scrubland,
02 June 2014
|
Madeleine Cops Seal Off Praia Da Luz Scrubland
Sky News (with video)
9:56am UK, Monday 02 June
2014
Police examine an area of land to the west of the resort where Madeleine disappeared while on a family
holiday in 2007.
By Tom Parmenter, Sky News Correspondent,
in Praia da Luz
Police investigating Madeleine McCann's disappearance have sealed off a search area as they
prepare to begin excavations in Praia da Luz.
A team of Portuguese police officers, some with dogs,
and at least four vehicles have been stationed on a mound to the west of the town since early this morning.
They
are expected to be in the area for days as they work to identify anomalies in the terrain which may merit further investigation
by digging.
Officers from the Metropolitan Police team that has been spearheading the new investigation are not
currently at the site.
An area in the Praia da Luz resort has been
sealed off
The development marks a significant new phase of the investigation into Madeleine's disappearance
while she was on holiday with her family in the Portuguese resort in May 2007.
The latest police activity is taking
place at one of several areas in and around Praia da Luz identified as potential search sites.
They include
another area of scrubland close to the apartment in the Ocean Club resort where the McCanns had been staying.
The
land which had been earmarked for development is now fenced off but was an open area on the night Madeleine vanished.
The search area is to the west of where the
family stayed on holiday
Her parents Kate and Gerry McCann have not travelled to Portugal but will be kept
up to date with any developments.
The area cordoned off this morning has been searched before.
British
expat residents in Praia da Luz confirmed to Sky News that they had recently seen a military aircraft flying for long periods
possibly conducting aerial reconnaissance.
Kate and Gerry McCann have not travelled
to Portugal for the search Former Metropolitan Police search adviser Keith Farquharson told Sky News: "They
wouldn't just be identifying that part by plucking it out of thin air they have obviously got hard information and the
evidence trail is leading to that particular area." Explaining what is likely to happen next, Mr Farquharson said:
"The area will be properly mapped with GPS co-ordinates for each one of those sites. "Those areas will
then be broken into smaller areas which will be easier to search, then you would send in the ground penetrating radar which
will look for anomalies below the surface. "Once those anomalies are identified then in my experience you
would deploy victim recovery dogs to those particular areas." As they are working alongside the Portuguese
authorities, the Metropolitan Police are giving out very few details about the new phase of the investigation or how long
it will last.
----------------
Search Will Follow 'Tried And Tested' Method [side article]
Updated: 7:35am UK, Monday 02 June 2014
By
Tom Parmenter, Sky News Correspondent, in Praia da Luz
The new searches in Praia Da Luz by police investigating
the disappearance of Madeleine McCannn will follow tried and tested principles.
Former Metropolitan
Police search adviser Keith Farquharson explained to Sky News how the teams will work to try to narrow down the search.
He said: "The investigation team will have done their background work on where they think their suspect will
have gone once they had decamped from the scene.
"They will fit that around the profile of the most likely
deposition sites for the body, if that is the case.
"They will involve a search adviser who will put together
the search plan - then they advise the senior investigating officer that you need to fly over the areas that you want to search.
"It will then be analysed to see if there is any ground disturbance or any anomalies from looking down from the
air.
"The area will be properly mapped with GPS coordinates for each one of those sites.
"Those
areas will then be broken into smaller areas or chunks of land, which will be easier to search.
"Then you
would send in the ground penetrating radar which will look for anomalies.
"It will show anomalies within the
earth structure but it won't show a skeleton like an X-ray would - it would just show the anomaly in the ground.
"So that would have to be investigated and the best way to do that initially is victim recovery dogs and the methods
they use.
"Once they have been through, if they don't find anything then it is decision time for the senior
investigating officer - do they want all of those sites dug and physically searched?
"The searching can then
be physically done by humans or digging machines can be brought in.
"When you have finished it, whether or
not you have found a body or deposition site, you have got to be able to say hand on heart to the senior investigating officer
either 'we have found what we have been looking for, and we have recovered it properly and we haven't compromised
any evidence'.
"Or, 'we haven't found it and it definitely isn't there,' which is almost
as useful because you are discounting part of that land from that part of the investigation."
----------------------
Transcript
of short video
By Nigel Moore
Tom
Parmenter: The police investigation into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann has this morning entered a new phase. You can see some of the area behind me. This is an area of scrubland in Praia da Luz about half a mile or so away
from the apartment, where Madeleine vanished back in 2007, and this now has been sealed off, in the last 20 minutes or so,
by the local Portuguese police. And this is the first stage of a series of searches that British police will be
involved in over the coming days, here in Portugal, to try to go over once again old ground to try and understand what happened
seven years ago. And you can see this mound. It's quite a distinctive landform here, just to the west of where
the Madeleine... Madeleine McCann vanished, and we've seen officers here looking out through binoculars from that mound.
It's almost a bit of a vantage point but, once again, it is scrubland, it is the kind of area that would
have been open on that night in 2007 when Madeleine vanished. And the process that we can expect to see, errr...from
this point, is one of these sites being secured and then a careful, methodical process that is tried and tested, errr... on
previous searches and investigations in which we will, in all likelihood, see ground-penetrating radar brought in to try to
look beneath the surface and then if there are any anomalies picked up, within that surface, then perhaps we will see police
dogs and also digging. So, it will be a slow careful process that is starting here this morning but it is the most
visible breakthrough, in as much as the police are back here, working in Praia da Luz looking for clues in the disappearance
of Madeleine McCann.
------------------
Main article updated with new graphic:
Madeleine
Cops Seal Off Praia Da Luz Scrubland Sky News
11:07am UK, Monday 02 June 2014
Police examine an area of land
to the west of the resort where Madeleine disappeared while on a family holiday in 2007.
(...)
An area has been sealed off near the Ocean
Club where the family stayed
(...)
|
Madeleine McCann: police search scrubland
in Praia da Luz, 02 June 2014
|
Madeleine McCann: police search scrubland in Praia da Luz
The Guardian
Portuguese police to use ground-penetrating radar at wasteland 300m from apartment where girl disappeared
in 2007
Mark Tran Monday 2 June 2014 10.06 BST
Police investigating the disappearance of Madeleine McCann have sealed
off an area of scrubland in the Portuguese resort of Praia da Luz to begin fresh searches, which are expected to involve the
use of ground-penetrating radar.
The equipment will detect whether the ground has been disturbed and excavations
of any site could then follow.
Last month, Scotland Yard said it would begin a "substantial phase of activity
on the ground" as part of the renewed investigation into Madeleine's disappearance.
The BBC reported that
the operation was under way on Monday, with Portuguese police and dogs at the site, which is surrounded by flats and villas,
many of them holiday properties. The initial search, involving a dozen British officers who will oversee the effort, is to
focus on wasteland 300 metres from the Ocean Club apartments, where the McCanns were staying. The ground, which had been used
to grow cabbages, is now hard and covered with bushes and thick grass.
The site has reportedly been selected because
of its proximity to the Ocean Club resort and because it is in the direction of the spot where a suspect was seen walking
with a little girl in his arms the night of Madeleine's disappearance.
The ground searches are expected to
focus on three parts of the resort where three-year-old Madeleine went missing on 3 May 2007 while her mother and father,
Kate and Gerry McCann, were having dinner with friends at a tapas restaurant near their holiday apartment.
Metropolitan
police assistant commissioner Mark Rowley said last month the operation in Praia da Luz did not amount to a significant breakthrough,
instead describing it as the "routine slog" of an ongoing investigation. He said there were many fruitful lines
of inquiry being explored but conceded: "We may go through every line of inquiry and all of them draw a blank."
Rowley appealed for media restraint ahead of the searches, a call that was echoed by a Polícia Judiciária
source in Lisbon who insisted the investigation would not be "transformed into a media circus".
The renewed
searches followed negotiations between Britain and Portugal involving various international letters of request from Britain.
Each search requires prior approval from prosecutors in Portugal. British police began a review of the case in 2011 at the
instigation of David Cameron following appeals from the McCanns and then launched their own investigation.
|
Madeleine McCann: Police in Portugal search
scrubland, 02 June 2014
|
Madeleine McCann: Police in Portugal search scrubland
BBC News (with video)
2 June 2014
Last updated at 11:33
Police will use sophisticated equipment
to look for signs of disturbed earth
Police investigating the disappearance of Madeleine McCann
have sealed off a large area of scrubland in the Algarve resort of Praia da Luz.
The British girl was
three when she went missing in the resort in 2007.
On 22 May Scotland Yard said a "substantial phase of operational
activity" would start in Portugal in the coming weeks.
The BBC understands that has started, with Portuguese
police at the scene and UK officers expected to join them.
Police are expected to use dogs and "ground penetrating
radar" to search the area, looking for disturbed earth.
The scrubland is being searched after a request from
the Metropolitan Police.
Similar requests have been made for two other locations in Praia da Luz.
It
is believed that UK police officers arrived in Portugal on Sunday and Scotland Yard is providing some of the technical equipment
to be used in the search.
The area of scrubland - about the size of three football pitches - is surrounded by
flats and villas, many of them holiday properties.
It is about five minutes' walk from the Ocean Club complex,
where the McCanns were staying when Madeleine disappeared.
Scrubland search area, Praia da Luz
A 77-year-old man who has lived near the area of scrubland for
13 years told the BBC the latest search was "ridiculous". "The police have been here before,"
said the man, who did not want to be named. "We all helped search this area three or four days after it [Madeleine's
disappearance] happened. "I walk my dog every day and no one was digging holes."
----------------
At the scene
By Lauren Turner
The first residents knew of anything happening on this scrubland was when they were disturbed by barking dogs in the early
hours.
The private land - earmarked for a development that was never built - was accessible last night but is
now completely sealed off by the yellow and white tape of the GNR, the national police.
Portuguese officers, wearing
sunglasses in the fierce sunshine, are standing guard at the perimeter of the site, which stretches down towards the coast.
The police have been joined by a large contingent from the media, who have cameras trained on the ground as they
await developments. The only words being exchanged between officers and journalists is the occasional "bom dia"
- or "good morning".
The scene is being watched too by locals walking past, or on their morning jog,
and those in holiday apartments with balconies overlooking the Atlantic.
The view would ordinarily be picturesque
but has been transformed today as the eyes of the world turn to this small Algarve resort again.
Madeleine McCann went missing in the Algarve
resort of Praia da Luz in 2007
Stewart Drummond, 68, from Eaglesham, near Glasgow, who has been coming
to Praia da Luz with his wife Janice for 27 years, said: "It's a pity it's taken so long to get to this stage.
"Talking to locals especially, they feel that they want to move on.
"Every time anything happens,
it puts the resort back in the spotlight for the wrong reasons.
"But obviously everyone wants to see closure
for the McCann family and if they find something, it would give them that.
"As parents, we feel for the family
- for it to happen in such a 'safe' place makes it all the more tragic."
Mrs Drummond said she thought
holidaymakers would not be put off coming to the resort by the latest developments.
"I don't think people
were really aware this would be happening this week though.
"For the first year or two some British families
stayed away but now it's back to normal."
Police, whose vehicle is just visible on top of the
mound, are searching scrubland overlooking the sea
The area was taped off in the early hours
of Monday Scotland Yard launched a fresh investigation into Madeleine's disappearance last July, codenamed
Operation Grange. In March, British police said they were seeking an intruder who sexually abused five girls in
Portugal between 2004 and 2006. Detectives said the attacks happened in holiday villas occupied by UK families
in the Algarve.
-----------------
Madeleine McCann: Police in Portugal search scrubland BBC News video
Police investigating the disappearance of Madeleine McCann have sealed
off a large area of scrubland in the Algarve resort of Praia da Luz.
The British girl was three when she went
missing in the resort in 2007.
On 22 May Scotland Yard said a "substantial phase of operational activity"
would start in Portugal in the coming weeks.
Sources in Portugal told the BBC that had now started, and police
with dogs are at the scene.
Tom Burridge reports.
------------------
Transcript of short video
By Nigel Moore
Tom Burridge: Well, this area is fairly extensive here, behind me. It stretches down to some apartments
that way, and back up the other way as well, and you can see that mound in the distance where police vehicles have been since
the early hours of this morning.
It's been taped off, errr... completely, so we believe over the next few days
that British detectives, from the Metropolitan Police, will be working alongside their Portuguese colleagues essentially searching
this area of land. We believe they could be using, errr... ground-penetrating radar which is technology that essentially allows
them to map the ground underneath, errr... this area of land, possibly to look for clues, evidence, whatever they might else
be searching for in the investigation into the disappearance into Madeleine McCann and... Madeleine McCann's disappearance.
And, of course, the request for them to search this area of land initially came from the Metropolitan Police. Errr...
We believe there are two other areas of land, in Praia da Luz, which British detectives would also like to search, errr...
in the coming days and weeks.
|
Live: Madeleine McCann police seal off land
in Praia da Luz as two-day search begins, 02 June 2014
|
Live: Madeleine McCann police seal off land in Praia
da Luz as two-day search begins
Daily Mirror
Jun 02, 2014 08:54 | By Steve Robson
All the latest from the Portuguese resort where police are hoping for a breakthrough Gallery
This hilltop in Praia da Luz, Portugal, which has been sealed off
by police who are about to start digging as they hunt for missing Madeleine.
|
Portuguese police move in to an area of waste land on the west side
of Praia Da Luz as new searches are launched in conjunction with British police in the hope of finding what happened to
Maddie McCann.
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8:29
am
Welcome to our live blog where we will
bring you all the latest from the Madeleine McCann investigation in Praia Da Luz.
A two-day search is due to begin
near to the resort where the toddler vanished in 2007.
A large area of scrubland was sealed off in the early hours
of this morning.
British police arrived last night and have met their Portuguese counterparts to finalise details
of a search that is set to begin this morning.
-------------------
8:34 am
[Text version of above]Martin Fricker@martinfrickerBritish and Portuguese police are expected to spend two
days at this search site before carrying out excavations at two more sites in PdL
7:39
AM - 2 Jun 2014
------------------
8:45 am
Scotland Yard detectives flew into Portugal from Gatwick last night.
They will meet with their Portuguese
counterparts at the digging sites this morning.
The plan is to scour three areas close to where Madeleine vanished
in May 2007.
-------------------
8:54 am A hill overlooking the resort is just one of the main targets which will be searched. Others include a
building lot and another site outside the resort. This picture from the BBC's Alex Littlewood shows the hill.
[Text version of above]
Alex Littlewood@westnewsprodTo give a sense of scale of what will be searched. The whole
hilled area in pic is cordoned off. # MadeleineMcCann
8:33 AM - 2 Jun 2014
-------------------
9:08 am
This hilltop in Praia da Luz, Portugal, has been sealed
off by police who are about to start digging as they hunt for missing MadeleineThis was Portuguese police
gathering on the hilltop earlier this morning. They have since cordoned off a large area ahead of a dig.
-------------------
9:22 am
Here's an aerial photo outlining where the search will be
taking place. It's an area around 300m from the apartment complex where Madeleine was staying with her family
in 2007.
---------------------
9:35 am
"Detectives from Operation Grange held a meeting with their
Portuguese counterparts in Faro this morning. "Meanwhile local officers in Praia da Luz were seen scouring
the scrubland with binoculars while colleagues patrolled with dogs. "When digging begins, large white tents
are expected to be erected to shield the scene from public eyes."
---------------------
9:48 am
One line of inquiry for Scotland Yard is
a lone male paedophile who staged a series of sex attacks on young British girls while they were on holiday in the Algarve.
They are looking at nine sexual assaults and three "near misses" on British girls aged six to 12 between
2004 and 2006, including one in 2005 on a 10-year-old girl in Praia da Luz, where Madeleine vanished two years later.
Hundreds of people have already made contact with police in response to appeals for help to find the attacker.
--------------------------
10:05 am
This hilltop in Praia da Luz, Portugal, has been sealed
off by police who are about to start digging as they hunt for missing MadeleineLocal Portuguese officers
have been spotted organising where the search will take place this morning. Nearby roads have also been cordoned
off.
----------------------------
10:31 am
[Text version of above]
Martin Fricker@martinfrickerBritish detectives have just arrived at the temporary police
command centre in Praia da Luz to prepare for the search # Madeleine9:29 AM - 2 Jun 2014
---------------------------
10:50 am
More police officers arriving at the cordon now.
[Text version of above]
Jon Kay @jonkay01
More Portuguese police officers arriving now in Praia da Luz
as the Madeleine McCann search begins on scrubland.
10:27 AM - 2 Jun 2014
------------------------
11:34 am
Locals seem less than impressed that this search has started up again.
A 77-year-old man told the BBC he
thinks it is "ridiculous".
"The police have been here before," said the man, who did not want
to be named.
"We all helped search this area three or four days after it [Madeleine's disappearance]
happened.
"I walk my dog every day and no one was digging holes."
-----------------------
11:44 am
"British police arrived at the scrubland at 11.15am after
holding a briefing with their Portuguese counterparts in a local municipal building. "The detectives and
uniformed officers were surrounded by local TV crews and photographers as they emerged from the Municipal Mercado and drove
the short distance to the search area. "Four cars and a Europcar van - with ground radar in the back - used
a back entrance to get onto the cordoned off site. "As I write this, three teams are walking around the area
scoping possible digging sites. "Locals appear unhappy with the media once again descending on Praia da Luz
and bringing unwanted attention to the resort just as the prime tourist season is getting underway."
----------------------------
12:09 am
Today's
development comes two weeks after Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley from Scotland Yard said officers are working through
every credible line of inquiry in the search for Madeleine.
He said: "In the forthcoming weeks we are going
to be going to a substantial phase of operational activity on the ground in Portugal.
"It's something
that you would expect in any major inquiry.
"A thorough serious crime investigation works systematically through
all the credible possibilities, and often in an investigation you will have more than one credible possibility.
"Therefore, just because we're doing a substantial phase of work in the forthcoming week doesn't mean that
it's going to immediately lead to answers that will explain everything."
-------------------------------
12:36 am
[Text version of above]
Martin Fricker@martinfrickerBritish detectives and officers walking inside the search
area. Spades and surveying equipment unloaded from vans
12:35 PM - 2 Jun 2014
-----------------------
1:05 pm
British officers are now reportedly on the scene in Praia da Luz and in discussions with their Portuguese
[Text version of above]
Gareth Owen@GarethITVBritish officers discussing the search area with their Portuguese
counterparts. # MadeleineMcCann @ ITVCentral
11:54 AM - 2 Jun 2014
--------------------
1:39 pm
Police seem to be examining scrubland in more detail now.
[Text version of above]
Peter Lane @peterlane5news
More on Madeleine #McCann UK police now move into Praia Da Luz search site. Details and live update @5_News
1:03 PM - 2 Jun 2014
|
Maddie: excavations begin today, 02 June
2014
|
Maddie: excavations begin today tvi24
13 photos
2014-06-02
|
Madeleine McCann: Police in Portugal
begin scrubland search, 02 June 2014
|
Madeleine McCann: Police in Portugal begin scrubland search
BBC News video
Police investigating the disappearance of Madeleine McCann have
started surveying a large section of scrubland in the Algarve resort of Praia da Luz. On 22 May Scotland Yard
said a "substantial phase of operational activity" would start in Portugal in the coming weeks. Police
officers from the UK and Portugal are cooperating on the search of the area. Jon Kay reports from Portugal.
-------------------------- Screenshots
--------------------------
Transcript
By Nigel Moore
Jon Kay: [voice over] After seven years, a new start in
the hunt for Madeleine McCann.
Police cordoned off this arid wasteland at sunrise to begin their largest search
so far.
With passing holidaymakers just hoping the McCanns will finally get some answers.
Marilyn Saunders: [Tourist] It must be dreadful
for them. I can't imagine what it must be like, and particularly after all these years.
Jon Kay:
[voice over] Madeleine was just three-years-old when she vanished during a family holiday here.
She'd been
staying in an apartment at the Ocean Club. The area that's now being searched is a 10 minute walk away, on the way down
to Praia da Luz beach.
Ex-pat John Ballinger was here on the night Madeleine was reported missing.
[to Mr Ballinger] Can you remember this area being searched?
John Ballinger: No...
Jon Kay: At the time, seven years ago.
John Ballinger: No, no... no. I don't think it was even entered into it. I don't think it's
ever been mentioned until very recently.
Jon Kay: [voice over] It's not clear whether this
search is based on new information but it was requested by the British police, who are here assisting the Portuguese.
Inside these tents is special radar kit which can look deep underground to detect if the earth has been disturbed.
[to camera] There's about 15 acres of scrubland here and before they can do any groundwork the team's have got to
measure out every single inch of this site with... with surveying equipment.
[voice over] But some here are angry
that the search is starting just as the summer season gets underway.
The mayor, Victor Mata, told me it should wait till the autumn,
after the tourists have gone and he said local people may take legal action to stop the search if holidaymakers start cancelling
their visits.
The real work is expected to start tomorrow and last all week but then there are two more areas that
police also want to search.
Jon Kay, BBC News, Praia da Luz.
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Madeleine McCann: UK Cops Search Scrubland,
02 June 2014
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Madeleine McCann: UK Cops Search Scrubland
Sky News (with video)
8:59pm UK, Monday 02 June
2014
A team of around 30 have travelled to Praia da Luz and began by unloading equipment and mapping out
the four acre site.
By Tom Parmenter, Sky News Correspondent,
in Praia da Luz
British police teams have started a search of scrubland on the Algarve in their renewed investigation
into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann.
A team of around 30 officers and police staff have
travelled to Praia da Luz and began by unloading equipment and mapping out the four acre site.
The cordoned off
area is a five-minute walk from the Ocean Club complex where Madeleine, who was three at the time, was staying with her family
in May 2007.
Parents Gerry and Kate McCann will be kept updated but have not travelled to Portugal.
An area has been sealed off near the Ocean
Club where the family stayed
The agreement between the Metropolitan Police and their Portuguese counterparts
is limited to one search area after the British team failed to get permission to search elsewhere in the resort.
It is understood they will use ground penetrating radar to identify any anomalies within the ground that may warrant further
investigation with police dogs or physical digging.
Other potential search sites include another area of scrubland
close to the McCanns' holiday apartment.
The land which had been earmarked for development is now fenced off
but was an open area on the night Madeleine vanished.
Police arrived early in the morning to
secure the scrubland
Former Scotland Yard detective Peter Bleksley told Sky News the radar equipment likely
to be used in the operation can detect if the ground has been disturbed as far back as seven years ago.
British
expat residents in the town have confirmed they recently saw a military aircraft flying for long periods possibly conducting
aerial reconnaissance.
The renewed activity by authorities has caused anger in the resort among expats and business
owners who just want to move on.
One Dutch resident, called 'Nana', complained that the police and the
press are back.
Kate and Gerry McCann have not travelled
to Portugal for the search She told Sky News the timing of the search at the start of the tourist season
was "outrageous" and doing "tremendous" damage to the town, adding: "Luz is totally innocent." She also wore a sign around her neck, saying: "Dig up the lies not Luz." 'Nana' denied
police were doing everything they could, saying "they are on the wrong path". The publisher of the Portugal
News newspaper Paul Luckman who lives nearby said the local police are co-operating with the British teams. He
said: "They are going to do what is asked of them, they will do it professionally and properly...our information is that
it will go on until the end of this week. "I think realistically we have to say we have reached the end of
the line here....there isn't anything left to do after this."
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Locals 'Deeply Sceptical'
Of Search [side article]
Updated: 9:38pm UK, Monday 02 June 2014
By Tom Parmenter, Sky News Correspondent, in Praia da Luz
Some 24 hours before
the police sealed off the scrubland in Praia da Luz, I was jogging through it on a morning run.
There
are a few tracks and narrow roads within it that lead down towards the striking Algarve coastline.
People have
used the tracks for the last seven years and the whole area was scoured by search teams in the days and weeks after Madeleine
McCann disappeared.
People who live and work here cannot understand why the Metropolitan Police are doing it -
many feel persecuted particularly as this is the start of their vital summer season.
Insiders on these kind of
searches tell us the police must have something.
It is unlikely there would be anything of significance amongst
the trees and undergrowth but the police will look deeper underground.
They will scan the rocky subsurface with
kit than can look up to four metres down.
If there is something out of place here the police will find it.
But the locals are deeply sceptical and just want them to pack up their equipment and run off into the sunset.
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Screenshots
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Transcript of video 1
By Nigel Moore
Tom Parmenter: [voice over] Just before
the sun rose on the Algarve, the Portuguese police moved in.
A few hours later, this large area of scrubland was
crawling with search teams.
British officers marking out Portuguese territory.
A joint operation to
see if there is anything here that explains what happened to Madeleine McCann seven years ago.
The scrubland is
a 10-minute walk along the coast from the Ocean Club complex where the McCanns were staying.
The area was
searched back in 2007.
First the area will be mapped out, then it will be scanned using radar - and if that turns
up anomalies beneath the surface, sniffer dogs will be used. If areas of interest are identified, digging will begin.
But turning up to conduct these searches, just as Praia da Luz is starting its tourist season, hasn't gone down
well.
'Nana': [Praia da Luz resident] There's enough time, all the rest of the year
when there's no-one here. Errm... it's... it's damaging Luz because Luz is a very peaceful, quiet, wonderful paradise.
Tom Parmenter: [voice over] The British police wanted to search other parts of this town but
have so far only been given permission to work here.
It will take days but they are determined to do it.
Paul Luckman: [Publisher, The Portugal News] They're going to do what's been asked of them; they
will do it properly; they will do it thoroughly. I guess... our information is that it will go on until the end of this week.
At that point, I think it will finish and I really think it's going to be very hard to convince the authorities - and
that's the Attorney General or a judge - to allow them to do anything like this again.
Tom Parmenter:
[voice over] Plotting out this search has taken months.
The McCann family, of course, will be kept updated.
It feels like progress but everyone knows that the answers may simply not be here.
Tom Parmenter, Sky News,
Praia da Luz.
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Video: Madeleine Search And The Media Sky News
8:59pm UK, Monday 02 June 2014
Police officers involved in the search for Madeleine McCann have told the media that they'll suspend operations
if there's any attempt to interfere with their work. Tom Parmenter explains.
-------------------------
Transcript
of video 2
By Nigel Moore
Tom Parmenter:
With such a burst of activity - cordoning off this area and the British police team's arriving with their equipment -
inevitably the focus is back on Praia da Luz.
And the police have been very clear to the media, saying that if
this turns into a media circus - such as the kind of frenzy they saw here back in 2007, in the days and weeks after Madeleine
disappeared - these searches will simply stop. The police - the British and the Portuguese - will call it a day, move away,
and wait for the media to disappear.
It is a difficult balance but they know that they need to be able to get on
with this work undisturbed and what we've seen so far is a certain termination [sic: determination] from the press to
make sure that they're not the ones who delays or impedes the searches that are going on.
No-one wants to get
in the way of the police investigation but, of course, this big burst of police activity, a great deal of money - British
taxpayer's money - being spent, of course, there is interest, because this is one of the great mysteries of the last decade.
So, it is in all likelihood going to be our home for the next week or so, as we wait and watch. The media are not
going to be briefed by the police on an ongoing basis. We're just going to have to see what happens here and whether or
not they find anything that helps them understand what happened to Madeleine seven years ago.
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