McCanns ‘worn out’ by question of leaving Madeleine aloneThe parents of missing toddler Madeleine McCann, who vanished from the Ocean Club resort in Praia da Luz last May then aged three, are said to be ‘worn out’ by questions relating to the fact they left their infant daughter alone in the family’s holiday apartment with her younger twin siblings while they dined at a nearby restaurant. Instead, they insist the “real issue” that needs to be looked into is the kidnapping of their daughter.
Participating in an EU parliamentary press conference to promote a petition launched two months ago in Brussels, campaigning for an EU-wide missing child alert system, Kate and Gerry McCann said they were “tired” of being asked about why they left their daughter alone and that “people should focus on the crime committed”.
“We didn’t abandon nor did we neglect Madeleine. Someone came into the apartment and took a child. That is the question. Keeping going over the same issue is really very annoying”, Gerry McCann declared.
His wife, Kate, also said “the real question is that a child was kidnapped and there is a criminal on the loose”.
“We must concentrate on the real matter. It does not help to keep bringing up the same old subject. Nothing has changed over the past 14 months and I don’t understand why we have to keep talking about it”, she said.
Meanwhile, the McCanns have said they are “confident” of gaining the support they need for an EU-wide alert system for abducted children to be created.
The couple have been lobbying MEPs to enlist a necessary 393 of them to back the plan by July 24th for it to be published.
But they are still 167 short, and say some are “surprisingly” unaware of their proposal.
“Whilst we remain confident... we have also learnt that we still have much to do to increase awareness”, said Kate.
Kate and Gerry McCann believe that a European version of the US Amber Alert system would have helped the search for their daughter in the crucial hours after her disappearance.
Meanwhile, Portuguese authorities have said the family will soon be allowed access to the police files in the case.
Fernando Jose Pinto Monteiro, Portugal’s Attorney-General, told a Portuguese newspaper the period of official secrecy in the case would end next month, though due to judicial holidays, this deadline could be prolonged until late August, when the McCanns will discover the case Portuguese police have against them.
Portugal News-on-Line