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Met Police
Commissioner Sir Paul Stephenson denied the Madeleine McCann
case was |
Britain's
top policeman has faced accusations that the Madeleine McCann case was
getting "unfair" and "special" attention at Scotland Yard.
Sir Paul
Stephenson denied claims that his decision to agree to review the
investigation into the girl's disappearance could come at the cost of
other inquiries.
The commissioner,
appearing before members of the Metropolitan Police Authority, said
additional funds from the Home Office to support examinations could help
save jobs in the force's homicide division.
Sir Paul was
confronted over the review by London Assembly member Jenny Jones.
Speaking at City
Hall, she said she sympathised with the McCann family but asked him:
"Why is this a special case?" Sir Paul replied: "I do not take your
point."
The police chief
said he "jealously guarded" his operational independence as he pointed
to similar reviews which took place in the wake of the Soham murders and
Jersey child abuse scandal.
The Government
will reimburse the Met on a quarterly basis as the review goes on, he
said.
"It is not an open
cheque and it is not going to go on forever," he added. Sir Paul said
that as they are in the process of reducing costs, the review could
"give us the opportunity of retaining some skilled people".
Speaking later, Ms
Jones, of the Green Party, said she was angered by the commissioner's
response to her question. She said: "I am just not convinced by the
commissioner saying that he has extra resources that he can move around
so that other victims will not have unfairly lost justice as a result."
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 Kate and Gerry
dined with friends nearby. |