Hunt for Maddie: Police get new funds
EXTRA cash has been granted in the search for Madeleine McCann so the Metropolitan Police can continue their 11-year hunt for the missing girl.
The Home Office last night said it had allocated further funds to Operation Grange, the investigation into her disappearance from an apartment in Portugal in 2007.
‘The Government remains committed to the investigation into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann,’ a spokesman said.
‘We have briefed the Metropolitan Police Service that its application for Special Grant funding for Operation Grange will be granted.’
Detectives investigating Maddie’s disappearance applied for more cash for the search last month.
Government funding for the investigation has been agreed every six months, with £154,000 being granted from October last year until the end of this month.
More than £11million has been spent so far. The exact figure which has been allocated for the ongoing investigation is not yet known.
Madeleine, who was then aged three, vanished from an apartment in Praia da Luz in May 2007 while her parents were eating tapas with friends at a restaurant nearby. She would now be nearly 15.
Operation Grange, launched in May 2011, has been one of the longest, most high-profile and costly police investigations in history. Officers have sifted and translated 40,000 documents produced by Portuguese police who conducted the initial investigation, and by the eight teams of private detectives who have worked on the case.
Some 600 ‘persons of interest’ have been examined and alleged sightings of Madeleine – in Brazil, India, Morocco and Paraguay, on a German plane and in a New Zealand supermarket – assessed.
The quality Portuguese investigation of Madeleine’s disappearance was criticised by the British authorities.
‘Persons of interest’
Scotland Yard began an investigative review into the disappearance in 2011, on the orders of the then prime minister David Cameron.
Maddie’s parents Kate and Gerry insist the inquiry must continue because there is ‘absolutely nothing’ to suggest she has been harmed.
It comes after the couple, from Rothley, Leicestershire, pledged to ‘never give up’ on Madeleine in a message to supporters at Christmas.
They wrote on the Find Madeleine Facebook page: ‘We just wanted to pass on our love and thanks to everyone who has continued to support us throughout another year.
‘Friendship, solidarity and warm wishes go a long way in giving us the strength to get through and make the very best of it.’
Mrs McCann has previously said that Christmas is always ‘tinged with pain and longing’, saying: ‘Madeleine should be here and we should be celebrating with her.’
She has also said that she would simply like to know if her daughter is alive or dead because the not knowing is the worst part.