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  • 21
    hours
    ago

    Cops: People of interest in British girl's disappearance

    By Dasha Afanasieva, Reuters

    British police said on Friday they had identified people they want to question about the disappearance of Madeleine McCann, the 3-year-old who went missing in Portugal six years ago. 

    Madeleine disappeared from her room at a holiday resort in the Algarve, Portugal, on May 3, 2007, as her parents dined at a nearby restaurant, sparking a global manhunt and transfixing the world's media. 

    Speaking to the Evening Standard newspaper, Detective Chief Superintendent Hamish Campbell, head of Scotland Yard's Homicide and Serious Crime Command, said: "There are a lot of people of interest," without saying how many. 

    "There are people who could be properly explored further, if only to be eliminated." 

    British police confirmed they had identified people of interest but said they had not asked Portuguese police to arrest anyone. 
    Despite reported sightings the world over, the fate of Madeleine McCann remains a mystery. 

    Her parents Kate and Gerry were named as official suspects by Portuguese police four months after their daughter's disappearance, but in 2008 were cleared. 

    "Kate and Gerry remain very, very pleased with the work that Scotland Yard are doing and have been encouraged by Operation Grange from the day it began," the McCanns' spokesman Clarence Mitchell was quoted as saying by the British media. 

    British Prime Minister David Cameron ordered a new investigation by London police after the McCanns wrote to him in 2011 saying neither British nor Portuguese authorities had done enough to try to find their daughter.

    Related:

    6 years later, Maddie McCann's family has hope

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    4 comments

    What is taking so dang long....... You have people to eliminate, but haven't done so, since 2007. WHAT? Idiots, a young girl is missing. I wonder if it had been a daughter of a government official, would you do you effing job?

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    Explore related topics: missing, portugal, maddie-mccann
  • 22
    Jan
    2013
    9:58am, EST

    Incredible escape - high-speed train collision shreds rail car

    Stringer / Reuters

    Rescue workers stand at the site of a train crash in Granja do Ulmeiro on Jan. 22.

    Miguel Teixeira / AP

    A train sits beneath the carriage of another train after they collided at a station in Alfarelos, Portugal, on Jan. 22.

    Emergency services say a high-speed intercity train rear-ended a local train waiting to enter a station in central Portugal, derailing several carriages leaving a pile of wreckage on Portugal’s main north-south line, slightly injuring 21 people. Officials said the local train was waiting to pull into a station near Coimbra, 120 miles north of the capital, Lisbon, when the northbound intercity train slammed into it from behind at 9.15 p.m. (2100 GMT) on Monday

    --The Associated Press

    Miguel Teixeira / AP

    A worker walks by the wreckage at the scene of a train crash at a station in Alfarelos, Portugal, on Jan. 22.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Previously on PhotoBlog:

    • Anger over Portugal austerity reaches steps of Lisbon parliament
    • Forest fires continue to rage in Portugal
    • Red Bull Cliff Diving World Series begins

    A high-speed train from Lisbon rear-ends a local train in Granja do Ulmeiro, Portugal, derailing several cars and injuring at least 13 people. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    1 comment

    Train wrecks are never Pretty.

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    Explore related topics: portugal, world-news, train-collision
  • 14
    Nov
    2012
    6:59am, EST

    Violence breaks out amid austerity protests in Europe

    Anger and sometimes violent protests have been staged across Europe against unemployment and austerity measures.  ITN's Emma Murphy reports. 


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld
    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Updated at 9:05 a.m. ET: Pockets of violence broke out as public demonstrations and strikes over rising unemployment and austerity measures took place in many parts of Europe Wednesday.

    Spanish and Portuguese workers staged a coordinated general strike across the Iberian Peninsula, shutting transport, grounding flights and closing schools to protest against spending cuts and tax hikes.

    International rail services were disrupted by strikes in Belgium and workers in Greece, Italy and France planned work stoppages or demonstrations as part of a "European Day of Action and Solidarity.”

    Hundreds of flights -- including those between southern Europe and connection hubs such as London Heathrow, Paris Charles de Gaulle and Amsterdam Schiphol -- were also canceled.

    NOVEMBER 7: Greece's government has approved another round of deep cuts to spending, wages and pensions, which sparked fierce clashes between police and protesters. ITV's James Mates reports.

    More than 60 people were arrested in Spain and 34 injured, 18 of them security officials after scuffles at picket lines and damage to storefronts, Reuters reported. Riot police arrested at least two protesters in Madrid and hit others with batons, witnesses said.

    Protesters jammed cash machines with glue and coins and plastered anti-government stickers on shop windows. Power consumption dropped 16 percent with factories idled.

    More photos: Demonstrations across Europe over austerity measures

    In Italy, students pelted police with rocks in a protest in Rome over money-saving plans for the school system. The windows of a bank in Milan were reportedly smashed by protesting students, according to a report on the website of the U.K.’s Guardian newspaper.

    In Greece, state workers, holding banners reading "Enough is Enough," started rallying on several squares in central Athens on Wednesday morning.

    See more coverage of this story at ITV News

    Yves Herman / Reuters

    A passenger waits on an empty platform at the Thalys high-speed train terminal at Brussels Midi/Zuid rail station amid strikes across Europe Wednesday.

    The international coordination shows "we are looking at a historic moment in the European Union movement," said Fernando Toxo, head of Spain's biggest union, Comisiones Obreras.

    Spain, where one in four workers is unemployed, is now teetering on the brink of calling for a bailout from the European Union, with Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy trying to put off a rescue that could require even more EU-mandated budget cuts.

    Passion has been further inflamed since last week when a Spanish woman jumped from her apartment to her death as bailiffs tried to evict her when her bank foreclosed on a loan. Spaniards are furious at banks being rescued with public cash while ordinary people suffer.

    SEPTEMBER: Day two of demonstrations in Madrid as protesters clash with police outside parliament over new austerity measures. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    "We're going to protest because they're ignoring people's rights. People are being evicted and they're raising our taxes," said Sandra Gonzalez, 19, a social work student at Madrid's Complutense University who plans to march with friends.

    ITV News reporter James Mates posted a picture on Twitter of a deserted station in central Madrid.

    Madrid's main station completely deserted at height of rush hour this morning. Nothing moving #GeneralStrike twitter.com/jamesmatesitv/������¢���¯���¿���½������¦

    — James Mates (@jamesmatesitv) November 14, 2012

    In Portugal, which accepted an EU bailout last year, the streets have been quieter so far, but public and political opposition to austerity is mounting, threatening to derail new measures sought by Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho. His policies were held up this week as a model by Germany's Angela Merkel, a hate figure in crisis-hit southern European countries.

    A strike organized by CGTP in March had little impact, but in September hundreds of thousands of Portuguese rallied against a government plan to raise workers' social security contributions.

    "The first-ever Iberian strike" would be "a great signal of discontent and also a warning to European authorities," said Armenio Carlos, head of Portugal's CGTP union which is organizing the action there.

    Unions have planned rallies and marches in cities throughout both countries, with a major demonstration beginning at 6:30 p.m. (12:30 p.m. ET) in Madrid.

    Some 5 million people, or 22 percent of the workforce, are union members in Spain. In Portugal about one fourth of the 5.5 million-strong workforce is unionized.

    "This austerity is a never-ending story. We see no light at the end of the end of the tunnel, just more pain and difficulties. We have to protest, do something to stop it," said Lisbon pensioner Jose Marques, who planned to march Wednesday.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Demonstrators march in Rome, Italy, as protests and strikes over austerity measures were held by people across Europe Wednesday.

    ITV News is the U.K. partner of NBC News. Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

     

     

     

    108 comments

    "This austerity is a never-ending story. We see no light at the end of the end of the tunnel, just more pain and difficulties. We have to protest, do something to stop it," said Lisbon pensioner Jose Marques, who planned to march Wednesday.

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    Explore related topics: italy, economy, spain, europe, world, strikes, protests, portugal, greece, itv, featured, austerity
  • 29
    Sep
    2012
    2:57pm, EDT

    Spain, Portugal hit with anti-austerity protests

    Sergio Perez / Reuters

    Protestors shout slogans as they fill up Neptuno Square during a demonstration against government austerity measures in Madrid.

    By NBC News wire services

    MADRID — Tens of thousands of Spaniards and Portuguese rallied in the streets of their countries’ capitals Saturday to protest enduring deep economic pain from austerity cuts.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    In Madrid, demonstrators approached parliament for the third time this week to vent their anger against tax hikes, government spending cuts and the highest unemployment rate among the 17 nations that use the euro currency.

    The boisterous crowds in the Spanish capital let off ear-splitting whistles near parliament and yelled ‘‘Fire them, fire them!’’ -- referring to the conservative government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy.


    Rajoy’s administration presented a 2013 draft budget on Friday that will cut overall spending by 40 billion euros ($51.7 billion), freezing the salaries of public workers, cutting spending for unemployment benefits and even reducing spending for Spain’s royal family next year by 4 percent.

    Pablo Rodriguez, a 24-year-old student doing a master’s in agricultural development in Denmark, said the austerity measures and bad economy mean most of his friends in Spain are unemployed or doing work they didn’t train for.

    Andres Kudacki / AP

    A picture of Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy is seen during the demonstration in Madrid.

    Spain's unemployment rate is almost 25 percent, and more than half of people under 24 are jobless.

    ‘‘I would love to work here, but there is nothing for me here,’’ Rodriguez said. ‘‘By the time the economy improves it will be too late. I will be settled somewhere else with a family. One of the disasters in Spain is they spent so much to educate me and so many others and they will lose us.’’

    He doubts he will put his education to use in Spain until he is 35 or 40, if ever, will probably get job abroad and stay.

    In Lisbon, retired banker Antonio Trinidade said the budget cuts Portugal is locked into in return for the nation’s €78 billion ($101 billion) bailout are making the country’s economy the worst he has seen in his lifetime. His pension has been cut, and he said countless young Portuguese are increasingly heading abroad because they can’t make a living at home.

    ‘‘The government and the troika controlling what we do because of the bailout just want to cut more and more and rob from us,’’ Trinidade said, referring to the troika of creditors -- the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund. ‘‘The young don’t have any future, and the country is on the edge of an abyss. I'm getting toward the end of my life, but these people in their 20s or 30s don’t have jobs, or a future.’’

    In Spain, Rajoy has an absolute majority and has pushed through waves of austerity measures over the last nine months -- trying to prevent Spain from being forced into the same kind of bailouts taken by Portugal, Ireland and Greece.

    The protests near Spain’s parliament turned violent Tuesday and Wednesday nights when protesters clashed with riot police, who barricaded entry to the streets surrounding government buildings. Dozens of people were arrested and injured.

    Investors worried about Spain’s economic viability have forced up the interest rate they are willing to pay to buy Spanish bonds. The country’s banks hurting from a property boom that went bust are set to get help soon from a €100 billion ($129 billion) financial lifeline from the eurozone, and Rajoy is pondering whether to ask for help from the ECB to buy Spanish bonds.

    Finance Minister Cristobal Montoro said Saturday that the budget cuts for next year were necessary to ease market tensions and try to bring down high interest rates Spain must pay to get investors to buy its bonds.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Afghan generation comes of age, post-Taliban fall
    • Trial of pope's ex-butler over leaked papers begins
    • In Iran, sanctions bite and currency collapses
    • 'Lady whisperer': Cabbie snaps topless female passengers
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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    165 comments

    The people of Spain have a challenging problem. They had elected many socialist for years who gave entitlements to the people. Now their country is bankrupt, broke! They either suffer severe austerity caused by socialists or start a civil war that will eliminate half of the population and return th …

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    Explore related topics: eu, spain, protests, portugal
  • 4
    Sep
    2012
    10:37am, EDT

    Forest fires continue to rage in Portugal

    Nuno Andre Ferreira / EPA

    Firefighters find themselves in a life-threatening situation as they use hoses to fight a forest fire in Quinta da Sobreira, central Portugal, on Sept. 4.

    This has been one of the worst summers in many years for forest fires in Portugal and the nation's civil defense says they have deployed more than 1,700 firefighters to combat fires in the center and north of the country. 

    Nuno Andre Ferreira / EPA

    Firefighters combat a forest fire in Quinta da Sobreira, central Portugal, on Sept. 4.

    Rafael Marchante / Reuters

    Smoke from a forest fire fills the air in Alvaiazere, near Ourem, Portugal, on Sept. 4.

    Rafael Marchante / Reuters

    Firefighters combat a forest fire in Alvaiazere, near Ourem, Portugal, Sept. 4.

     

    Related content:
    Fire crews battle Angeles National Forest blaze

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    Comment

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    Explore related topics: europe, portugal, wildfire, world-news
  • 18
    Aug
    2012
    7:15am, EDT

    Tropical Storm Helene slams Mexico; Hurricane Gordon heads for Azores

    Nasa / Reuters

    Tropical Storm Gordon, seen over the Atlantic Ocean in this NASA handout satellite image Thursday, became a hurricane Saturday.

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    Updated at 6:30 p.m. ET: Tropical Storm Helene made landfall off the Gulf of Mexico on Saturday and weakened into a tropical depression as it plowed up Mexico's east coast, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.

    The depression was about 65 miles west-northwest of Tampico and had maximum sustained winds of 30 miles per hour, the NHC said in its 4 p.m. CDT bulletin.

    Tropical storm warnings were discontinued on the Mexican coast, although Helene still was expected to produce two to four inches of rain in the states of Veracruz and Tamaulipas.

    Helene was predicted to continue weakening and dissipate within 48 hours, the NHC said.

    There were no reports that Helene had affected the Gulf of Mexico's oil installations, which are built to resist much more powerful hurricanes.

    Earlier, Portugal posted warnings for the central and eastern Azores islands as Tropical Storm Gordon moved eastward across the Atlantic and later turned into a hurricane.

    The National Hurricane Center said Gordon had maximum sustained winds of 75 mph and was headed east at 18 mph.


    In the northern part of Veracruz, a lush coastal state with hundreds of towns and villages sitting along streams and rivers that can swell dangerously in heavy rain many were evacuated as Ernesto approached last week, and flood damage made some 10,000 people homeless.

    State of emergency
    Mexico's government declared a state of emergency in more than 100 population centers in Veracruz and was providing them with emergency aid. The country's national weather service warned of intense rains and winds along the Veracruz and Tamaulipas coasts, with heavy rain, hail and lightning possible.

    A storm surge could raise water levels by as much as 1 to 2 feet above normal along the immediate coast and to the north of where landfall is made.

    Heavy rain was expected in the city of Tampico, an oil-refining center and important port in the southernmost part of Tamaulipas state. The Tampico metropolitan area has roughly 790,000 inhabitants, sits just above sea level and is surrounded by lakes and lagoons that are already full and could easily flood in the event of heavy rains.

    Civil protection authorities in Veracruz issued a yellow alert, one level below the highest warning, for population centers in the north and center of the state, warning residents to familiarize themselves with the locations of emergency shelters, avoid crossing swollen streams and rivers, and keep listening to radio and TV for storm updates.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Could teddy bears unsettle 'Europe's last dictator'?
    • Police find severed human head, foot in park near Toronto
    • Russian court sentences Pussy Riot rockers to 2 years in prison
    • Women allowed on bicycles as N. Korea turns wheels of change
    • Flames of Syria's conflict singe rest of region
    • What's causing Afghan troops to turn on coalition forces?
    • I'd like a beer, 70-year-old says after icy 6-day ordeal in Alps

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    20 comments

    That storm needs to take a direct route to the cartels

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  • 18
    Jul
    2012
    7:30pm, EDT

    Multiple forest fires hit Portugal

    Antonio Cotrim / EPA

    A helicopter fights fire that started close to Bairro da Milharada near Odivelas, Portugal on July 18 2012.

    Carlos Barroso / EPA

    A fireman fights fire that started at Moleanos near the city of Alcobaca, Portugal, on July 18, 2012.

    Duarte Sa / Reuters

    Flames move towards houses in Funchal, on the Portuguese island of Madeira on July 18. More than 1000 firefighters are trying to extinguish forest fires after temperatures rose up to 104 degrees Fahrenheit in several areas of the country.

    NBCNews.com's Alex Witt reports.

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    3 comments

    Pictures are OK but what about an article about it !!!

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    Explore related topics: fire, portugal, wildfire, natural-disaster, forest-fire
  • 3
    May
    2012
    4:30am, EDT

    Five years on, parents of missing Madeleine McCann cling to hope

    The parents of Madeleine McCann are more hopeful now, than ever before, that their daughter will be found. In an interview with British TV's Mary Nightingale, to mark the fifth anniversary of Madeleine's disappearance. ITN's Romilly Weeks reports.

    By Tazeen Ahmad, NBC News

    LONDON -- Year after year, a new photo of the British child Madeleine McCann has emerged. They are a collection of pictures that would have taken pride of place in any happy family home if they had been photos of a real child rather than the haunting computer-generated images of a girl who vanished into thin air five years ago.

    Madeleine's name has become synonymous with parental despair -- a heartbreaking story that has no end.


    Thursday marks the fifth anniversary of her disappearance while on holiday in Portugal. An international manhunt, numerous unsubstantiated sightings of her around the world, an unprecedented media campaign launched by her parents and a best-selling book followed, but so far, all of it has come to nothing.

    The child's parents Kate and Gerry McCann are, clearly, as distressed about her disappearance as they are determined to find her.

    In an interview with GMTV, a U.K. morning television show, they said that despite the passage of time they still had hope that Madeleine was alive.

    "We've always believed that and we're realistic; we don't know what's happened, but we know there's a very good chance that she could be alive," Kate McCann said. "There's no evidence to the contrary [and] ... year after year, missing children that have been abducted are found alive."

    Teri Blythe / Met. Police - AFP - Getty Images

    A combination of images showing missing British girl Madeleine McCann at the age of three (left) and a computer-generated image released by police showing what police believe Madeleine could look like aged 9.

    "I think particularly the cases when they're younger children, it's often not horrendous circumstances," Gerry McCann added. "A lot of the kids are taken as babies or toddlers; [they] have just been brought up as normal children and obviously with the older children, it's been a bit more unpleasant, but they are capable and adaptable and cope well."

    Other kids to continue search?
    Despite the enormous stress and scrutiny the couple have been under for 5 years, they are still very much together and their two other children, twins Sean and Amelie, are showing signs of their parents' dogged determination.

    "Even Sean said to me -- this is going back 18 months -- 'you know mummy if you haven't found Madeleine when we get older, me and Amelie will look for Madeleine,'" Kate McCann told GMTV.

    "And I have absolutely no doubt about that, but I don't want them to have to be in the position where they're carrying around this kind of sadness and frustration or whatever ... to find Madeleine. We want to find her now," she added.

    TODAY's Matt Lauer talks with Kate and Gerry McCann about the ongoing search for their daughter Madeleine, the clue they may have missed and the strain this investigation has had on their relationship.

    What befell their family is the stuff of parental nightmares. Lucy Beresford is a psychotherapist who works in London and says couples whose children have been missing for long periods are forced to keep their lives on hold.

    "It's a terrifying place to be; there is no proof one way or the other and a lot of speculation. The lack of clarity is exhausting," she said.

    At a press conference given by the McCanns Wednesday, it was clear to see the media obsession with this story is far from fading. And no one has worked harder to keep Madeleine's face and name in the spotlight than her mother and father.

    Missing girl Madeleine McCann may be 'still alive'

    It's hard to believe that half a decade has passed and yet she remains deeply imprinted in our minds. The credit goes to her parents who, despite their distress, have relentlessly pursued a high-profile and sophisticated campaign to find her.

    At its peak their "Madeleine Fund" raised more than $3 million, much of which has been spent on private detectives searching for her.

    Talking to the Pope, Oprah
    And with a book, regular front-page headlines, a meeting with the Pope and a television appearance on Oprah, the McCanns have managed a very astute media campaign to keep their daughter in the spotlight.

    Helping them with their media strategy is one of the smartest heads in the business, a tough former television reporter turned PR guru, Clarence Mitchell.

    They hired him early on and now he's a close friend of the family. He went from being a professionally dispassionate journalist to really caring about the people he is working for.

    British police have issued a new appeal for information on Madeleine McCann, the little girl who disappeared while vacationing with her family in Portugal five years ago. NBC's Tazeen Ahmad reports.

    At every media appearance made by the McCanns, he stands nearby ready to leap to their defense. Many say he is their secret weapon.

    And the timing last week of the British police's press conference could not have been better. A full week before the actual anniversary, it grabbed headlines all week.

    Andy Redwood, the police officer in charge of the British review of the investigation, told reporters that they were a quarter of the way through 100,000 documents and of these there were "195 investigative opportunities."

    He said they had taken "two positions" on Madeleine's disappearance. "One is that she is alive," he said, "and the other is that she is not, and in relation to the former and on the evidence we believe there is a possibility Madeleine is alive."

    Headlines sprung up in the hours and days afterward, focusing on the idea that the child could be alive and the general public sat up and took notice.

    Cop: Parents have to believe
    I asked Colin Sutton, a former chief inspector of London's Metropolitan Police, for his take on what may be going on behind the scenes. Could Madeleine really be alive after all this time?

    "Technically, you have to use these media opportunities to get help," he said, "you can't stress in an appeal that she may be dead or you are switching people off."

    Sutton, who was in the police's murder squad, then told me about some depressing statistics that all those involved in the police case review would be fully aware of.

    "If a person is missing for more than 48 hours, there is a 90 percent chance that they won't be coming back. A lot of the team will be thinking that she simply isn't alive," he said.

    It's a fact, he added, that the McCanns also would have had to face and that while police officers would have been sensitive, they certainly wouldn't have shied from it as a distinct possibility.

    "They would have been told she is dead," Sutton said, "and they would have accepted that, but they, as her parents, also have to believe that she will be found one day."

    And that one day, the McCanns will be hoping, is soon.

    Their campaign to find her has not lost momentum over the past 5 years.

    It is certainly one of the most picture-friendly stories I have ever worked on. There are endless photos of this gorgeous little child, cute home video footage of her and her siblings.

    Her telegenic, middle-class professional parents wear their grief with dignity and have appeared on our television screens over and over again.

    But some are saying that this may be their last hope. And public opinion in Portugal is against the McCanns. Many still believe they were behind their daughter's disappearance.

    With Portuguese authorities as yet failing to take the cue to reopen the investigation, the British police's efforts can only go so far.

    Tantalizing dream of finding her
    So on this fifth anniversary all we really have is this new image of Madeleine that the family are hoping will finally lead to the closure they need.

    "Closure" is a word the British police used a lot last week.

    When pushed on what this means, they said they simply want the case solved.

    For the rest of us -- who have watched this story from afar, who want but are unable to help -- it's a poignant reminder that if she is still alive, she will be celebrating her ninth birthday next week. It is also a reminder that if she does reappear, it will be against all odds, making it an even more incredible story.   

    But at the moment, that remains just a tantalizing dream for the McCanns.

    Kate McCann told GMTV she had imagined Madeleine being found alive, but tried not to.

    "You know what, I don't that often because it's almost like ... it's so good, it's so beautiful I guess, that I don't want to take myself there and for it not to be real," she said. "I've had some dreams along the way, not recently and they're so tangible that it's incredibly painful because that's what we want every single day."


     

    144 comments

    I truly hope she will be found one day...this story has always haunted me. Poor little one. May a miracle come to her and her family very soon!

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    Explore related topics: europe, missing, child, portugal, u-k, featured, madeleine-mccann, kate-mccann, gerry-mccann
  • 25
    Apr
    2012
    8:37am, EDT

    Missing girl Madeleine McCann may be 'still alive', UK police say

    British police have issued a new appeal for information on Madeleine McCann, the little girl who disappeared while vacationing with her family in Portugal five years ago. NBC's Tazeen Ahmad reports.

    By Tazeen Ahmad, NBC News, and Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    LONDON -- Missing British girl Madeleine McCann, who vanished during a 2007 family vacation in Portugal, may still be alive, police said Wednesday.

    Days ahead of the fifth anniversary of her disappearance, the Metropolitan Police Service said it was possible the girl was abducted from the family’s rented apartment while her parents dined at a nearby restaurant.


    Madeleine was almost four years old when she went missing, prompting an international hunt that has so far provided little except false leads.

    Police released a new computer-generated image of the girl, showing how she might look on her ninth birthday, which would be on May 12.

    "As a result of evidence uncovered during the review, they now believe there is a possibility Madeleine is still alive and are appealing for anyone who is able to provide direct information as to her whereabouts to contact the team," police said in a statement, according to the BBC.

    TODAY's Matt Lauer talks with Kate and Gerry McCann about the ongoing search for their daughter Madeleine, the clue they may have missed and the strain this investigation has had on their relationship.

    Investigators are combing through about 100,000 pages of information for more details, authorities said, without getting into specifics.

    "The intention is to identify from that material investigative opportunities which we will then present to the Portuguese authorities who retain primacy for the investigation," police said. "Officers have so far identified around 195 such opportunities within the historic material, and are also developing what they believe to be genuinely new material." 

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Israeli military chief: I doubt Iran's 'rational' leadership will make nuclear bomb
    • Son of sacked Chinese official fights back
    • Indian baby bride wins landmark annulment
    • Missing girl Madeleine McCann may be 'still alive', UK police say
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    156 comments

    These parents have gone through a horrible ordeal, however, i still believe they should have been charged with child neglect! I would never have left my children sleeping alone in a hotel room and gone out to eat.

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    Explore related topics: britain, europe, missing, portugal, featured, madeleine-mccann, crime-courts

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