The Scottish Mail on Sunday

LOST BOY OF BARCELONA

Hope fades for missing British 7-year-old... as police admit jihadi van driver is STILL on loose

- From Simon Murphy and Jonathan Bucks IN BARCELONA

THE family of a British seven-yearold boy caught up in the horror of the Barcelona carnage faced an agonising wait last night to learn if he had survived.

Julian Cadman’s father, Andrew, arrived in Spain last night after flying overnight from his home in Australia to seek informatio­n from police and consular officials after the boy was officially described as ‘missing’ by the Foreign Office.

The boy’s mother Jumarie – known as Jom – was still in hospital last night with serious injuries.

Mr Cadman’s wife and son were in Spain for a family wedding when they were caught up in the van attack on Las Ramblas. A poignant photograph of the youngster, from Kent, proudly wearing an England football shirt, was taken

just days before in the UK. His father, a 42-year-old cabinet maker, only found out about the attack on the radio.

Last night, as Mr Cadman visited the city morgue, where the bodies of victims of the atrocity are being held, Julian’s family were bracing themselves for the worst.

Social media appeals for informatio­n on the youngster were taken down yesterday.

As the family’s ordeal continued, it emerged:

Jihadis had planned to use a volatile explosive known as the ‘Mother of Satan’ to murder hundreds of people in a ‘spectacula­r’ terror attack, even more devastatin­g than Thursday’s atrocity in which 13 people were killed and more than 130 injured;

A huge internatio­nal manhunt codenamed Operation Cage continued for the driver of the van, who is believed to be the final member of the terror cell;

Police were last night investigat­ing an Islamic preacher over his possible involvemen­t in the Barcelona massacre;

The youngest victim of the Las Ramblas attack was named yesterday as Javier Martinez, three, who died alongside his great-uncle Francisco Lopez Rodriguez;

Pressure mounted on Channel 4 to postpone a controvers­ial drama about Islamic State.

The alleged van driver, Younes Abouyaaqou­b, 22, and originally

‘Looking at the pictures, I fear the worst’

from Mrirt in Morocco, is thought to be the only member of the IS cell still on the run.

In a day of fast-moving developmen­ts, the Cadmans’ extended family endured the agony of conflictin­g media reports on whether Julian was found or missing, alive or dead.

‘We have had the television on constantly since it happened,’ said Norma Canaveral, who affectiona­tely calls the boy ‘my grandson’ although she is his great-aunt.

‘We’ve been on Facebook and looking on the internet for anything that might give us hope that Julian is all right,’ said the 66-year-old hospital worker last night from her terrace home in Plaistow, East London.

One image from the attack has stayed with her, she said.

It shows a young boy, limbs horribly askew and apparently lifeless, on Las Ramblas in the aftermath of the outrage.

‘It was so shocking to see that picture – it looks like Julian,’ she said. ‘I’m hoping and praying that it’s not, but it looks very like him.

‘And lying near to him is a woman who definitely looks like Jumarie. Looking at this picture, I definitely fear the worst.’

Mrs Canaveral’s son Warlito, 30, and daughter Christabel, 28, have been franticall­y calling relatives who had travelled to Barcelona for the family wedding.

‘They haven’t been able to get in touch with anyone – it seems as though everyone’s mobile is switched off after the attack,’ said Mrs Canaveral.

‘All we can do is leave messages on social media and call anyone we can think of who might know something, but so far we’ve heard nothing. It’s so frustratin­g.’

Another close relative of the Cadmans in England, who asked not to be named, told The Mail on Sunday: ‘We are all desperatel­y worried.’

The family member said Jom, who had travelled with Julian to Barcelona for her niece’s wedding, was undergoing further operations in hospital. ‘Jom has broken legs, broken arms, a broken hand and facial injuries,’ she said. Last night police were searching the flat of an Islamic preacher, Abdelbaki Es Satty, for samples of DNA and fingerprin­ts to verify whether he was killed at the bomb factory where the cell had been preparing an attack with butane gas bombs.

Es Satty, 45, began preaching in the town of Ripoll – where several members of the gang lived – around two years ago but stopped two months ago, sources at the town’s mosque said.

One – possibly two – members of the jihadi cell were killed when their bomb factory at a house in Alcanar, 125 miles south of Barcelona, blew up on Wednesday night.

Five more terrorists were shot dead in Cambrils, a seaside town 70 miles south-west of Barcelona, in the early hours of Friday as they launched a second attack with axes and knives.

It is thought Moussa Oukabir, 17, originally suspected of being the van driver after using his older brother’s identify papers to rent it, was among those shot dead in Cambrils.

Four more suspects, including Oukabir’s older brother Driss, 28, are being questioned by detectives and are expected to appear before an investigat­ing magistrate this week. Said Oukabir, the father of the Oukabir brothers, said he was in shock that his sons were suspected of involvemen­t.

They had shown no sign of radicalisa­tion, he said at his home in Melouiya, a village high in Morocco’s Atlas Mountains. ‘They lived like the young people of their age,

‘I can’t stop crying... it was somebody’s child’

 ??  ?? POIGNANT: Julian wears an England football shirt in a family snap taken last week
POIGNANT: Julian wears an England football shirt in a family snap taken last week
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