McCanns demand action for missing Madeleine

KATE and Gerry McCann said yesterday they had had enough of "fluffy worthless words", calling again for a full case review over their daughter Madeleine's disappearance.

Exactly three-and-a-half years since Madeleine went missing, the couple said they wanted action and for "somebody to do something".

Yesterday they launched a petition to lobby the UK and Portuguese governments for a joint or independent review of the case.

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"Essentially for the last three-and-a-half years the authorities have not been doing anything proactive to help Madeleine," Mr McCann said.

"That is despite our best efforts to encourage them to do so. "I don't think it's right that the onus should fall on us, the authorities

really should be doing more."

His wife said: "I don't want to be appeased and that's what I feel we're getting at the moment. "We need action, I don't need fluffy worthless words. We need somebody to do something. "Madeleine is still missing, she's a little girl, her abductor is still out there, so by not carrying on we are putting other children at risk. I think more needs to be done."

The couple, from Rothley, Leicestershire, have met with former Home Secretaries Alan Johnson and Jacqui Smith, as well as current Home Secretary Theresa May, to discuss the issue and to ask for a review of the case.

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Mrs McCann said when they met Mr Johnson, who commissioned a "scoping exercise" by the Child Exploitation and Online Protection centre to see if a review would be helpful, they felt they were making progress, but now did not even know if the report had been read.

"There has not been a formal case review and I think for such a serious case like this, and with the profile of it and international aspects, that should be carried out," Mr McCann said. "The onus is on the UK and Portuguese authorities to sort that out. "I think the best thing is for this case to be solved, and at the moment the authorities are not doing anything proactive to try and do that."

Madeleine was three when she went missing from her family's holiday flat in Praia da Luz in the Algarve on May 3, 2007, nearby.

Portuguese police launched a massive investigation with the support of British officers, but the inquiry was formally shelved in July 2008 without reaching any firm conclusions about her fate. Private detectives employed by the McCanns are still investigating the case and as well as the petition, the couple are appealing for continued financial support for the official Find Madeleine fund which as it stands will run out in spring 2011.

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Mr and Mrs McCann said they had not given up hope and spoke of their frustration at a lack of help from the authorities. "Children do get found years down the line," Mrs McCann said. "There's no evidence that Madeleine is not out there alive. "It's just heartbreaking to think that nothing is getting done other than what we are having to do, other than our small team. "Obviously a small team has limitations. If we had a review, if we had help from the authorities, the chances of finding Madeleine would be much greater I think. "We deeply believe it will take us that step closer to finding Madeleine."

Mr McCann said fundraising was a secondary objective to urging people to help put pressure on the governments "to do what they should have done all along". "In the interim we are carrying on, we're interviewing witnesses, dealing with new information and continuing reviewing the information available to us," he said.

"But it's important to emphasise we do not have all of the information, there's information that went into the inquiry that was not made public when the file was disclosed and therefore it's impossible for our team to review everything, we simply don't have access to it."

U-turn over book ban 'baffling'

Mrs McCann also spoke of the decision to lift a ban on a book by former Portuguese police detective Goncalo Amaral, in which he alleges the little girl died and her parents faked her abduction, and described it as "baffling".

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Mr McCann said: "Anyone who tried to claim that Madeleine is dead without evidence, anyone who does that and essentially stops the search – their motive has to be questioned. "We're here trying to instigate the search in a meaningful way, it's very clear he wants the search to stop."

The couple also spoke of their family's plight and Mrs McCann said: "We're doing okay, we make the best of it. "Life is not normal. I guess it's a new kind of normal."

We need action, I don't need fluffy worthless words. We need somebody to do something...

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