The
father of missing
Madeleine McCann
said today his "innocent, vulnerable"
daughter had been "essentially given up on" by
British authorities.
During a
television interview days before the
third anniversary
of her
disappearance, Gerry McCann urged the Government to carry out a
"comprehensive review" of the case.
He told
Lorraine Kelly: "It's not right that an innocent, vulnerable British
citizen is essentially given up on.
"And I
don't think it's right that as parents, that we have to drive the
search. Of course we will, but not everyone has had the same resources
and support that we have had to be able to do that. And I think it's
pretty cruel."
The pre-recorded GMTV interview will be broadcast today.
Mr
McCann said it was "incredibly frustrating" that police in Portugal
and the UK are not doing more to find the missing youngster.
At the time of her disappearance, the couple were criticised for leaving
their three children alone in a holiday apartment as they went for
dinner nearby.
Mr McCann said that if they could go back, they would not have left her
alone.
He said: "If we could turn back the clock and change what happened,
obviously we wouldn't have done it.
"We can't. And what I would say is, you know, people have got to put
themselves into our position. What would you do if it was your daughter?
After this, what would you do?"
The parents still believe Madeleine, who went missing when she was
three, is alive and are releasing a pack for people to take abroad and
put up posters featuring her picture.
Kate McCann said: "Certainly in my heart I feel she is out there. I mean
I know there is nothing to say that she isn't, so we have to carry on
working and thinking like that.
"I mean logically I can't say, I mean none of us can say for definite
other than the people involved. But I know we can't give up because
there is no evidence to say that she is not." |