In the massive publicity campaign, viewers had been
promised a ‘revelation’ but the only revelation during the BBC’s special
Crimewatch programme on the disappearance of Madeleine McCann was how slow
Scotland Yard detectives seem to have been in getting up to speed on the case
and how shallow the BBC was in its reporting.
Chief Inspector Andy Redwood said that in their
investigation he and his team were going back to the very start of the case and
“accepting nothing,” meaning taking a wholly fresh look at things. Yet not once
during the programme did the police or the presenters consider anything other
than the abduction theory for which there is no evidence except the say-so of
the parents and their holidaying friends.
The Chief Inspector highlighted what he called “significant changes” to the timeline and “accepted version” of events. He
explained that Scotland Yard had ruled out the sighting by Jane Tanner of a man
carrying a child closely resembling Madeleine outside the McCann’s apartment at
9.15 that fateful evening. The man turned out to be another holidaymaker carrying
his own child home from a crèche.
While the Jane Tanner sighting has been central to the
widespread acceptance of the abduction theory up until now, those who dismiss
the abduction claim have always considered the sighting most unreliable.
Scotland Yard has now shifted its emphasis to the
well-documented sighting by an Irish family near the centre of the village at
10pm. Praia da Luz visitors and residents have now been asked to cast their
minds back to 3rd May 2007 to see if they can identify the person portrayed in
two newly released e-fit images.
The images were produced five years ago and they show two
significantly different versions of the same man who may be a kidnapper – or he
may not. He may be another entirely innocent person with nothing whatsoever to
do with Madeleine’s disappearance.
If this really was a well-planned abduction as is being
suggested, would a kidnapper carry his victim in his arms a considerable
distance through the centre of the village towards the beach with all the
attendant risk of being spotted? The question was not asked on Crimewatch.
The so-called “reconstruction” performed by actors,
supposedly of events shortly before the disappearance, was notable for what it
glossed over or did not reconstruct at all.
Bearing in mind the respectful nature of the programme
towards the parents, it was perhaps not surprising there was no attempt to
explain, for example, evidence found by two British cadaver dogs, or the many
unanswered questions and conflicting statements made to the Portuguese police.
What will have been most disturbing for many viewers
familiar with the McCann saga was the absence of journalistic balance and lack
of rigour shown by the British media in the pre-broadcast propaganda and in the
programme itself.
The show presented nothing new. It has merely added to the
media circus that has blighted this tragic case from the very beginning.
Scotland Yard has apparently been inundated with calls as
a result of the programme. British tabloids are already reporting that “police
may have made a major breakthrough in the hunt for Madeleine.” Wishful
thinking might be closer to the truth.
Madeleine deserves better.