The Scotsman

Still no closure for Ben’s family

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The man leading the most recent investigat­ion in to the disappeara­nce of Ben Needham on the Greek island of Kos in 1991, Detective Inspector Jon Cousins, now believes that the toddler was killed in an accident while heavy machinery was operating where he was last seen.

An item believed to be in Ben’s possession when he was last seen was recovered. The police have said that they have closed off a large number of theories. A team of 19 South Yorkshire Police officers, forensic specialist­s, an archaeolog­ist and search and rescue personnel spent 21 days this summer digging near a farmhouse and a second site 750 metres away. That is a huge amount of resource, and it cannot be said that police are not giving it their all. But there is only one thing that counts here and the police have been unable to deliver it: certainty.

Ben’s family have long thought he was abducted, and although DI Cousins’ view is no doubt the culminatio­n of all his considerab­le profession­al experience and therefore valid, does not give certainty. Even the finding of Ben’s possession goes no further to uncovering the truth – he might have dropped it while being abducted.

So does the failure to find Ben’s fate mean that the investigat­ion was a waste of public money, and should that be allowed to cast doubt over any future similar investigat­ions?

The answer must be an emphatic no. There is the possibilit­y that a heinous crime has been committed, and the police are dutybound to fully investigat­e, and there was always the possibilit­y that they could at last give this poor family closure. Unfortunat­ely that has not happened but the prospect of closure is worth every effort.

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