▪ McCanns join parents of April Jones
to raise funds for Child Rescue Alert
▪ Madeleine's father says social media
is important tool for UK-wide system
▪ Hugh Grant, Sir Trevor McDonald and
Fiona Phillips also at London event
▪ It comes after inquest opens into
death of McCann 'troll' Brenda Leyland
The father of Madeleine McCann said last
night that social media was ‘powerful’
and should be used to ‘improve the
world’ as he supported a national alert
system to help find missing children.
Gerry and Kate McCann, whose daughter
disappeared in 2007, joined the parents
of murdered schoolgirl April Jones to
raise funds for the Child Rescue Alert
with the charity Missing People.
It comes after an inquest was opened
into the death of Brenda Leyland, whose
body was found in a hotel room two days
after she featured in a TV report
exposing internet ‘trolling’ of the
McCanns.
|
Powerful'
social media: Kate and Gerry
McCann, parents of missing
girl Madeleine McCann arrive
at the Mondrian London Hotel
last night to attend a
function in aid of promoting
Child Rescue Alert |
|
Still
struggling': Coral and Paul
Jones, parents of murdered
schoolgirl April Jones,
arrive for the event |
Mr McCann said social media was an
important tool for the Child Rescue
Alert, a UK-wide system which uses
email, text messages and websites to try
to secure the safe return of missing
children.
Speaking at the London Mondrian Hotel,
Mr McCann - whose three-year-old
daughter disappeared during a family
holiday to Portugal - said: ‘The key
thing about social media is it's
powerful.
‘This is a way of using it to do good.
That's what we should be using these
powerful technologies for - to try and
improve the world.’
Asked whether they felt it was right for
the media to identify internet trolls,
46-year-old Mr McCann replied: ‘I don't
really want to talk about trolls, we're
here very much to talk about child
rescue.’
Coral and Paul Jones called on Twitter
and Facebook to do more to tackle
internet trolls after they received
‘horrible’ abuse online following the
death of their daughter.
|
Apperance:
Presenter Fiona Phillips was
also at the function in aid
of promoting Child Rescue
Alert |
Five-year-old April from Machynlleth,
mid Wales, was kidnapped and murdered in
October 2012.
Asked whether they had sympathy with
Madeleine's parents who have previously
voiced concerns about online abuse, Mrs
Jones said: ‘We've had some ourselves
and it took to going in the press and on
the news to get it taken off. It is
horrible, the people that do it.’
Asked whether the police could do more
to tackle online trolls, she replied:
‘It's the internet people as well
because the police can't do everything.’
Mr Jones said: ‘They should have their
own policing force of some sort to do
that, with legal ways to prosecute
people.’
Actor Hugh Grant, former newsreader Sir
Trevor McDonald and presenter Fiona
Phillips were among the guests at a
dinner organised by Missing People to
raise funds for the Child Rescue Alert.
Mrs Jones said she is still struggling
to come to terms with her daughter's
death.
Mark Bridger was given a whole life
sentence after he was convicted of
April's abduction and murder and of
perverting the course of justice by
unlawfully disposing, destroying or
concealing her body.
April had been playing with friends
close to her home on the Bryn Y Gog
estate in Machynlleth, when Bridger, a
former slaughterhouse worker, enticed
her into his car. Her body has never
been found.
Following the recent two-year
anniversary of her daughter's
disappearance, Mrs Jones said: ‘I'm
still struggling now to this day. We
take each day as it comes.
‘Everybody's different in how they cope.
Me, personally, I take each day as it
comes. Some days are better. My husband
takes it different, my kids take it
different.’
|
Comments:
Paul and Coral Jones called
on Twitter and Facebook to
do more to tackle internet
trolls after they received
‘horrible’ abuse online
following the death of their
daughter in Wales two years
ago |
|
Death: An
inquest has been opened into
the death of Brenda Leyland
(pictured), whose body was
found in a hotel room two
days after she featured in a
TV report exposing internet
'trolling' of the McCanns |
Mr Jones added: ‘I have days where I'm
absolutely fine. Two or three days on
the trot. Then I have down days. I need
to keep busy.’
"The key thing about social
media is it's powerful. This
is a way of using it to do
good"
Gerry McCann
|
Mrs McCann said she believed the Child
Rescue Alert could make ‘a huge
difference’ in finding missing children.
‘You only have to look at the statistics
to see how the amber alert in the USA
has been successful - 685 children have
been found alive and reunited with their
families since it started,’ she said. ‘I
believe the Child Rescue Alert system
could do the same here.’
Mr McCann, 46, added: ‘I think it's an
opportunity, the Child Rescue Alert, for
the British public to help. In our case,
there was a great outpouring of people
wanting to help.
‘It only takes one person coming
forward, responding to that piece of
media, that could save a child's life
and nothing can be more important.’ |