The Portuguese
Polícia Judiciária, often denigrated in the UK for their handling of the Madeleine McCann
case, have made in clear they are in charge of the latest phase of the
investigation and that the Metropolitan Police Service and the British media
had better toe the line.
Mark Rowley, assistant
commissioner of the Met, says he has discussed with his PJ counterpart the high
level of interest in the forthcoming ground search activity, some of which is likely
to take place in public.
In an open letter
to the British media, Rowley warned that “if we provide any briefings or
information on the work they are undertaking on our behalf, or if reporters
cause any disruption to their work in Portugal , activity will cease.”
The Met appealed
for “media restraint” when it upped its two-year review to a fully-fledged
investigation in July last year, but since then there has been an almost
non-stop torrent of media reports - mostly
highly speculative and many plainly absurd - about ‘new leads’ and ‘prime
suspects.’
The Mirror broke the latest news about the ground
searches by quoting - not the Met police - but a source close to Madeleine’s
parents.
“Kate and Gerry
have been told police will be conducting the searches in and around Praia da
Luz as soon as they get the green light from Portuguese authorities,” said the
source.
Scotland Yard
refused to comment, but the Mirror
felt able to inform its readers, “There will be earth diggers everywhere and it
will look very dramatic and it will be a heartbreaking and hugely emotional time
for Madeleine’s poor parents.”
The paper’s unnamed
source went on to make the assertion that “police have assured Kate and Gerry
that it does not mean they are specifically searching for her body. They are
doing searches as much as to rule scenarios out as much as rule them in.”
If the intention
is not to search specifically for a body, “how many holes do you have to dig to
rule out the existence of a body?” wondered an unnamed Portuguese police source
quoted by the Portugal News.
“Why does the
Metropolitan Police Service want to dig up holes if they believe Madeleine is
still alive? How do you prove that somebody is alive by digging up holes?” the
Portuguese police source added.
In questioning
the usefulness of serious excavations in the village, a Praia da Luz resident
told the Algarve Resident newspaper: “We’ve had so many people
suspected of abducting the child, but none of them were thought to have been in
the possession of heavy-duty, earth-digging equipment when they did so.”
The fact is, apart from the beach, the
terrain in most of the neighbourhood consists of limestone bedrock. Even in the
patches of shallow hard soil, how could an abductor have buried a body, or any other material evidence,
unobserved and without tools?
In a wry
observation, the Portugal News source
said about the British detectives:
“Sincerely, it is not easy to understand them. But I’m sure they know
what they are doing.”
A Portuguese
judge apparently did not entirely agree and turned down as unwarranted a British
police request to do house searches on ‘people of interest’ who worked at the
complex where the McCanns were staying.
Meanwhile, the hope in the tranquil resort of Praia
da Luz, and in the rest of Portugal, is that detectives from the PJ and the Met can work quietly and harmoniously as an
efficient team and come up with some hard evidence that
leads to justice for Madeleine.
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