Waterloo Region Record

Parents of missing British girl still hopeful she’s ‘out there’

- Sylvia Hui

LONDON — The parents of Madeleine McCann, the threeyear-old British girl who vanished during a family vacation to Portugal in 2007, say they are still hopeful they will one day be reunited with their daughter as they mark the 10th anniversar­y of her disappeara­nce.

In an interview with the British media released Sunday, the McCanns said they felt encouraged by the “real progress” that British police have made in the case in the past five years.

Scotland Yard said last week that, a decade later, detectives are still pursuing “critical” leads to trace Madeleine, who disappeare­d from a vacation home in Portugal’s Algarve region on the night of May 3, 2007.

Her parents had gone out to a tapas bar nearby after putting her and her twin siblings to bed.

Despite an investigat­ion costing more than 11 million pounds ($19.4 million) so far, police said there was no “definitive evidence” on whether Madeleine — who would be almost 14 now — is alive or dead.

The girl was abducted from the apartment, they said, but how and why it happened is still largely a mystery.

One theory that police say hasn’t been ruled out is a “burglary gone wrong.”

Gerry McCann, 48, acknowledg­ed it was “devastatin­g” not to have found her, but added: “No parent is going to give up on their child, unless they know for certain their child is dead. And we just don’t have any evidence.”

His wife, Kate, agreed.

“My hope for Madeleine being out there is no less than it was almost 10 years ago,” she said.

“I never thought we’d still be in this situation, so far along the line. It’s a huge amount of time … it’s a hard marker of time.”

Asked how the family was coping, the McCanns said that, like other families who have suffered tragedies, they are trying to move on and focus on their 12-year-old twins.

“You adapt and you have a new normality,” Gerry McCann said.

“At some point you’ve got to realize that time is not frozen.”

His wife said that she still buys Madeleine birthday and Christmas presents every year.

“But I couldn’t not, you know. She’s still our daughter, she’ll always be our daughter.”

 ?? JOE GIDDENS, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kate and Gerry McCann talk to the BBC about their daughter Madeleine who disappeare­d 10 years ago.
JOE GIDDENS, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kate and Gerry McCann talk to the BBC about their daughter Madeleine who disappeare­d 10 years ago.

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