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New searches in the Algarve in connection with the Maddie McCann case

New searches in the Algarve in connection with the Maddie McCann case

Euronews02-06-2025
German police are to carry out new searches in Lagos, in the Algarve, as part of the investigation into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann in 2007, according to information provided this Monday by the British authorities.
According to CNN Portugal, the operation, which will also include the intervention of the Judiciary Police, could begin as early as Tuesday and should be centred on an area between Praia da Luz and one of the houses where Christian Brueckner - the main and so far only suspect - lived at the time of the disappearance.
The same television station also points out that, with these endeavours, the authorities intend to try to find any traces of Maddie's body or any other evidence that could help support a case against Brueckner.
The three-year-old British child was reported missing in May 2007 while on holiday with her family in Praia da Luz, Lagos.
On the night of her disappearance, while her parents were having dinner with friends in a nearby restaurant, the little girl was in the tourist accommodation where she was holidaying with her family, in the same room as her brother and sister, who were only two years old. To date, the Portuguese, German and British authorities are still trying to figure out what happened on the night of 3 May 2007.
In 2020, the German authorities revealed that they were investigating Christian Brueckner, a 48-year-old German citizen, on suspicion of murder. He lived a kilometre from Praia da Luz at the time of the incident and already had a history of suspected child sexual abuse and rape.
However, he has not been charged with any offence in the case now under investigation and denies any involvement in Madeleine McCann's disappearance.
In addition, Christian Brueckner is currently serving a seven-year prison sentence in Germany for the rape of a 72-year-old woman in 2005 on Portuguese territory.
In mid-May 2023, 16 years after Maddie's disappearance, the Portuguese police resumed their search in the case, specifically at the Arade Dam in Silves.
This time, too, the work was carried out at the request of the German authorities, and British officials were also present.
This was after a tip-off in 2008 that the body of the British child had been left in those same waters.
Since the night of her disappearance, Madeleine McCann has never been seen in public.
At a press conference in Vilnius on Monday, President Andrzej Duda commented for the first time on the results of the second round of the presidential election.
"I hope that for Prime Minister Tusk and the government, this is an unambiguous signal from the Poles that they expect the kind of policy in their majority that the President-elect proposes and that Karol Nawrocki preached during his campaign," said the President.
Both candidates, in their post-election speeches, declared their intention to build bridges in a divided society.
Karol Nawrocki, the candidate backed by the Law and Justice Party, remained hopeful after the exit poll results—and his optimism proved justified, as later polls and the official results from the State Electoral Commission confirmed his victory.
"I believe that tomorrow we will wake up with our President Karol Nawrocki, who will put together a half-crawled Poland," praised the PiS-backed candidate.
Rafał Trzaskowski, after exit polls suggested he was winning, said he would be the president of all Poles.
"I believe that the first, most important task of the president of Poland will be to reach out to all those who did not vote for me," he said.
At Monday's conference, PKW chairman Sylwester Marciniak officially announced that Karol Tadeusz Nawrocki received 10,606,877 valid votes, while Rafał Kazimierz Trzaskowski got 10,237,286. The difference between them was fewer than 370,000 votes, or 1.78 percentage points – the smallest gap in a presidential run-off since 1989.
This shows how deeply divided society is and suggests possible political instability.
Will relations between Donald Tusk's government and the new president-elect improve?
We asked the people of Warsaw.
"They are on opposite sides and don't agree. But Nawrocki is a big unknown. Also, nobody knows anything," said one passer-by.
Another Warsaw resident toned down the mood: "We need to cool down first. Is it even possible to arrange something? I hope, however, that wisdom will win out and somehow these relations will settle down. And this nation will not be as divided as it is at the moment."
"There is no agreement between the government and the president. There are two different worlds: the Polish world and the German world," another man commented.
And his companion referred to Karol Nawrocki's passion for sport: "He has religious values and is a boxer. And a boxer will box."
"It looks as if the new president Nawrocki was elected almost on demand, so that the coalition can complain for the next five years about how they can't get anything done because the president closes the door in front of their noses," commented, in turn, a Pole who has lived in the UK for twenty years.
"I'm not Polish, but I think the situation is very bad and it's going to be super hard," a young Belarusian citizen who lives permanently in Poland told Euronews.
Two days after the first round of the presidential election, Donald Tusk announced the renegotiation of the coalition agreement and the reconstruction of the government, which was to take place after the election of the president.
"The atmosphere has to cool down after the elections. I am not saying it will be next year, but in June I will already be back calmly from talks with my coalition partners. Not to take anything away from them, but to make this government smaller – although in good proportions for everyone – and much more efficient," Prime Minister Donald Tusk said during an interview with TVP.
In a televised speech later on Monday, he announced his intention to hold a confidence vote in parliament without giving any more details.
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