Ayrshire Post

Sisters want answers on missing Alan

TA cadet’s disappeara­nce was a cover-up say family

- SALLY HIND

The sisters of an Ayr Army cadet feared murdered after vanishing on exercise more than 30 years ago have launched their own campaign to find the truth.

Denise and Christine Rae say they are “not being listened to” over claims Alan Rae may have come to harm.

Alan vanished from the Strone training camp in Garelochhe­ad, Argyll and Bute, on March 2, 1989.

Denise believes their little brother was killed and his death “covered up”.

And while Christine fears the worst, she says she still “has hope” he could be alive.

Last year, Denise, 51, begged CID officers to open a murder probe, insisting that new, anonymous informatio­n suggested foul play.

Now she and Christine, 52, have gone it alone with a fresh appeal for informatio­n and will travel to key spots in the inquiry to hand out 10,000 flyers with the help of a charity.

Denise said: “Alan would be 50 now. I don’t believe he ever left that camp. If he had, he’d have come home to us.

“I think the whole camp is covering up what happened to him and we want answers.

“We feel as if nobody is listening to us.”

Alan, of Ayr, was a new Territoria­l Army recruit with the Royal Highland Fusiliers when he vanished two days into the 10-day training camp.

Reports suggested he had gone to a disco in Helensburg­h the night he disappeare­d and an argument broke out because he was talking to a local girl.

His parents were told he left to walk back to camp alone but never made it back.

It was suggested he may have fallen into the Holy Loch and drowned but, despite extensive multiagenc­y land and water searches, he was never found.

One year after disappeari­ng, Alan’s wallet was recovered from the beach near the loch but forensic analysis concluded it had never been in water.

And Denise says she received a message after making an appeal on social media from a man who claimed he had found the wallet at the camp.

She said: “I went on to Facebook and saw a status from someone saying they found Alan’s wallet. He said they found it in the billet,

where they stayed inside that camp. But we were told it was found on the shore.

“I also got a phone call from someone saying they

were from the Army but couldn’t tell me their name. He said, ‘Something has gone seriously wrong and we always stick up for our own.’”

Denise had previously received reports through a pal that Alan was “murdered and buried along the A814”.

She was also given what she was told was the “last picture” of Alan in a pub before he vanished, by a source who said the cadet was being “taunted”.

The sisters feel compelled to find answers for their parents, who died within a week of each other in 2017 – 17 years after their other son Sammy died aged 26.

Denise said: “I still remember Alan leaving my mum and dad’s house to go to the TA base in Ayr, where he left for the trip.

“I remember him walking out, he was in such a great mood. He was athletic and loved all the TA stuff. He said, ‘I’ll see you when I get back’.

“He was a strong but quiet boy. We feel the police have turned their backs on us from day one. I feel as if they’re not listening at all. I want answers from the camp too.

“We’ve printed 10,000 flyers. We plan to get them all around Ayr and Garelochhe­ad. We’ve got T-shirts printed and want to make a big banner.”

Christine has travelled from her home in Nottingham to help drive the appeal over the coming weeks, including visiting Helensburg­h.

She said: “Every possibilit­y goes through your mind.

“Alan always said to me, ‘If I go away, I’m not coming back’. I like to think he’s still out there because of what he said. I’d love to see him again. I don’t think it’s going to happen but I’ve always had hope.

“There are different stories about what happened that night and we just want closure. I don’t think enough was done back then to find the answers. It was brushed under the carpet.

“Somebody knows something and maybe they’re too afraid to say something, but if it was their family, I’m sure they’d feel differentl­y.”

Missing Persons UK and Beyond, a Scottish charity, has been helping the sisters with their case and funding the appeal.

Joan Grant said: “Sadly there is not enough support out there for families like Denise and Christine’s.

“Some families are going through depression, anxiety, post traumatic stress disorder and so many other things thrown in.

“As a charity, we will always be here for the families of missing people.”

Police Scotland said Alan continues to be treated as a missing person.

A spokesman said: “Long term missing people are regularly reviewed for any possible news lines of enquiry.

“Anyone who has any informatio­n which could help with inquiries, regardless of the passage of time, is encouraged to pass this on to officers by calling 101.”

An Army spokesman said: “We will assist with any investigat­ion into the circumstan­ces around his disappeara­nce.

“As this is an ongoing Police Scotland investigat­ion, it would be inappropri­ate to comment further.

The spokesman added: “Our thoughts are with the family of Private Rae.”

We feel the police have turned their backs on us Sister Denise

 ??  ?? New campaign Christine and Denise, right, at Seaforth Barracks in Ayr where Alan left to head off on his trip to the Garelochhe­ad training exercise in 1989, and inset, the new flyers
New campaign Christine and Denise, right, at Seaforth Barracks in Ayr where Alan left to head off on his trip to the Garelochhe­ad training exercise in 1989, and inset, the new flyers
 ??  ?? Last photo training camp Alan in a pub while away at Territoria­l Army
Last photo training camp Alan in a pub while away at Territoria­l Army
 ??  ??

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