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Family in Pakistan missing after flash flooding
Family in Pakistan missing after flash flooding

Al Jazeera

timea day ago

  • Climate
  • Al Jazeera

Family in Pakistan missing after flash flooding

Family in Pakistan missing after flash flooding NewsFeed Several people believed to be part of the same family were filmed being swept downstream after flash flooding trapped them in the middle of the Swat River. Rescuers said 18 members from the same family were either dead or missing. Video Duration 02 minutes 43 seconds 02:43 Video Duration 02 minutes 39 seconds 02:39 Video Duration 02 minutes 20 seconds 02:20 Video Duration 02 minutes 33 seconds 02:33 Video Duration 00 minutes 30 seconds 00:30 Video Duration 02 minutes 00 seconds 02:00 Video Duration 01 minutes 11 seconds 01:11

South Africa: Committee Urges South African Police Service (SAPS) to Prioritise Training to Ensure that all Stations Respond Adequately in Missing Children Cases
South Africa: Committee Urges South African Police Service (SAPS) to Prioritise Training to Ensure that all Stations Respond Adequately in Missing Children Cases

Zawya

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • Zawya

South Africa: Committee Urges South African Police Service (SAPS) to Prioritise Training to Ensure that all Stations Respond Adequately in Missing Children Cases

The Portfolio Committee on Police has reiterated its concern that some South African police stations continue to ignore the National Commissioner's directive that police must respond immediately in cases of missing persons. The committee held a follow-up meeting with the SAPS and Women Empowerment Platform on violence against children regarding the matter of Jayden Lee Meek and other missing children. 'What came out of all the cases of missing children is the lethargy that the SAPS at police stations have generally responded when the case is reported. If the SAPS adhered to the directive that there is no waiting time to respond, many of these children could have been found alive,' said Mr Ian Cameron. The committee reiterated that no 24- or 48-hour rule precludes members of the public from opening a missing person's report. A missing person report must be opened and investigated immediately. An insistence to prevent the opening of a missing person report is irresponsible and runs counter to the directive issued by the National Commissioner of the SAPS. 'The committee has also emphasised that in a case where an officer refuses to open a case they can be reported. The committee also emphasised the communication shortcomings from the SAPS in keeping families updated on the progress of the case. According to the committee, continuous updates are necessary to assure communities and families that the SAPS is continuously investigating and that justice will be attained. It is important that SAPS also follow every lead to ensure justice. It is unacceptable that some cases are closed as undetected. For example, the case of Mia Botha has been ongoing for over 1 000 days, and there has not been tangible progress. The importance of the police K9 unit was also highlighted as an intervention that could have assisted the search in the Jayden Lee Meek and other similar cases. It remains unacceptable that the K9 unit in the SAPS remains severely underfunded and under-resourced. 'The continued disregard of this critical capability in the SAPS is illogical and undermines the police's ability to undertake effective search and rescue missions, 'Mr Cameron emphasised. Despite these concerns, the committee welcomed the active participation of civil society, such as the Women Empowerment Platform on violence against children. The contributions by civil society in finding solutions to the high crime rate must be encouraged. 'We reiterate the call that combating crime requires a whole-of-society approach if it is to be successful. The SAPS alone cannot effectively fight crime,' Mr Cameron said. Meanwhile, the Chairperson reiterated the committee's apologies for the miscommunication that resulted in erroneous reporting following the meeting held on 11 June 2025. The committee emphasised that there was no clarity that the meeting will be virtual and that representatives of the Women Empowerment Platform had planned to travel to Parliament and to hand over a memorandum. The committee reiterate its agreement with the Women Empowerment Platform that cases of violence against children must be investigated to ensure justice. Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Republic of South Africa: The Parliament.

Annie McCarrick: Search at Clondalkin property ends with nothing of evidential value found
Annie McCarrick: Search at Clondalkin property ends with nothing of evidential value found

Irish Times

time4 days ago

  • Irish Times

Annie McCarrick: Search at Clondalkin property ends with nothing of evidential value found

A near two-week search for the remains of Annie McCarrick, at a west Dublin house she once stayed in, has concluded with nothing of evidential value being found. Garda sources said while new intelligence had prompted the search, it was speculative and investigators did not know if it would lead to a breakthrough in the investigation into her disappearance in March 1993. However, as the property was linked to the chief suspect in the case, gardaí believed the new information was worth acting on. Significant excavation was done at the house in Clondalkin, including under an extension built in the last 15 years. The fact neither Ms Carrick's remains, nor any other evidence, were discovered there is a blow to the investigation team, which has carried out significant work to try to solve the case since it was upgraded from a missing persons inquiry to a murder investigation two years ago. READ MORE A member of An Garda Síochána at house in Clondalkin, west Dublin where a search took place as part of the investigation into the case of Annie McCarrick. Photograph: Sam Boal/Collins The chief suspect, a businessman in his 60s who knew Ms McCarrick, a 26-year-old from New York, was arrested earlier this month as the search of the property began. He denied any wrongdoing and was released without charged the following day after being questioned for 24 hours. The Irish Times called to his home, a large property in a secluded location in the east of country, after his release but the house appeared to be empty at the time. Garda headquarters on Tuesday confirmed the search at the property in Clondalkin had just concluded and that gardaí would 'remain on site in order to return the site' to the current residents, who were not linked to the case. It also said while the results of the search were not being released for 'operational reasons', Ms McCarrick's family in the US had been informed of the developments. 'Gardaí continue to appeal to any person who may have previously come forward who felt they could not provide Gardaí with all the information they had in relation to this matter, to contact the investigation team again,' the Garda added. 'With the passage of time they may now be in a position to speak further with the investigation team.' Gardaí believe Annie McCarrick was killed on the day her flat mates last saw her alive – March 26th, 1993. The chief suspect was spoken to as part of the investigation when Ms McCarrick disappeared, but no arrests were made at that time and the missing woman's remains have never been found. However, Ms McCarrick had told some US-based friends in the period before she disappeared that she felt harassed by the man and that he had struck her during an argument. The investigation has become more focused on him, and a man close to him, in recent years and his detention last week represented the first ever arrest in the case. Gardaí believe Ms McCarrick was killed on the day her flat mates last saw her alive – March 26th, 1993. They suspect her remains were disposed of, to conceal the crime, by the time she was reported missing two days later. Ms McCarrick had studied in Ireland from the late 1980s but went back to the US for two years. She returned to live in Ireland in January 1993 after falling in love with the country during a visit when she was a teenager.

Chilling 32-year mystery behind first victim of Ireland's 'Vanishing Triangle' that remains unsolved to this day as man 'obsessed' with missing woman is arrested and released without charge
Chilling 32-year mystery behind first victim of Ireland's 'Vanishing Triangle' that remains unsolved to this day as man 'obsessed' with missing woman is arrested and released without charge

Daily Mail​

time6 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

Chilling 32-year mystery behind first victim of Ireland's 'Vanishing Triangle' that remains unsolved to this day as man 'obsessed' with missing woman is arrested and released without charge

A man who had been identified as a suspect in the killing of one of the many women who went missing in Ireland's so called 'Vanishing Triangle' 32 years ago has now been arrested and released without charge after questioning - as the baffling mystery remains unsolved. New Yorker Annie McCarrick was last seen taking a bus to Enniskerry on March 26, 1993, after telling a friend she planned to go to the Wicklow Mountains for the day. The 27-year-old, who had just moved over from the US that year, was the first of eight women who would go on to disappear in the local area over the next five years. In 2023, the Gardaí upgraded her case into a murder inquiry after receiving an undisclosed new lead. Last week, a man in his 60s, who reportedly knew Annie well, was arrested on suspicion of her murder; but was released after 24-hours of questioning without charge. The businessman, who lives with his wife, denied any involvement in the disappearance. His status was only upgraded to official suspect in the last two years. The arrest was the first made in the case and came after officials took a statement from a 'close associate' of the suspect. The associate remains 'of interest' to the overall investigation, according to The Irish Independent. Gardaí reportedly believe the two men were together on the weekend Annie went missing and there are now questions over their alibi. The Irish Sun also revealed police seized a number of electronic devices, including laptops and phones, at the suspect's home on Thursday morning. Officers cordoned off and searched a house in Clondalkin, southwest Dublin, as part of the murder inquiry. The current occupants of the house have no connection to the case. Gardaí brought a cadaver dog, who is trained to detect signs of human remains, into the search at the rear of the property where excavation work had taken place. The man who was arrested for questioning was flagged to officers as a possible suspect immediately after the New Yorker's disappearance in 1993. Annie's friends claimed they were concerned about the man as she had told them she felt 'pressured and harassed' by him - and claimed he had hit her on one occasion. They alleged he became fixated on the belief that Annie was involved with a man who was well-known to him and he became jealous. However, they believed that the information they provided was mishandled and not adequately considered during the initial inquiry. According to The Irish Sun, Gardaí are planning to re-interview former colleagues of the businessman after concerns were raised about his alibi on the day Annie went missing. A source told the publication: 'Any evidence at the moment is just circumstantial. 'One strand is that one of the suspect's former colleagues had concerns about his lack of empathy after Annie's disappearance. 'This person made it clear that the suspect didn't appear to be too grief stricken considering how much he was obsessed with Annie.' The investigation had previously worked on the theory that the last sighting of Annie was at a Glencullen pub called Johnny Fox. In 2023, a source told the Irish Mirror: 'Some significant information has come forward which has seen the case being upgraded from a missing persons case to a murder. 'In 2018, the case of Deirdre Jacobs was upgraded to murder and searches of land took place after that in October 2021. 'The same could happen soon in Annie's case. They have already earmarked certain areas of interest which they want to look at.' During a press conference, Detective Superintendent Eddie Carroll revealed that investigators are keen to find find a handbag Annie was seen carrying in CCTV footage captured shortly before her disappearance. The last known CCTV footage of Annie shows the missing woman queuing in the Allied Irish Bank on Sandymount Road shortly before 11am on the morning of her disappearance. In the clip, can be seen wearing a longline coat and her leather bag is hanging off one shoulder. Because the bag was never found, investigators believe the unknown assailant may have chosen to keep the item. Detective Superintendent Eddie Carroll urged people who may know anything about the whereabouts of Annie's bag to speak with officers. 'I am appealing to those persons, 30 years later, to please come forward and speak to the investigation team,' he said during the conference. 'I want to speak with any person who has any information on the large brown handbag which it is believed that Annie was in possession of when she went missing.' He also urged anyone who had spoken to, or had any interaction with Annie around the time of her disappearance to come forward. 'I want to speak to any person who met, spoke with or had any interaction with Annie McCarrick on the 26th March 1993 or subsequently,' he said. 'There is a person or persons, who have information on the disappearance of Annie McCarrick and her murder on or about the 26th March 1993 and who haven't yet spoken to Gardaí or who may have already spoken to Gardaí but were not in a position to tell everything that they know at that time.' Annie McCarrick was born in Long Island but moved to Ireland in 1987 and began studying in Dublin. She went back to America in 1990 to get a master's degree, but returned to Ireland in January 1993 to settle. During an interview in 2016, her mother Nancy told RTÉ's Crimecall programme: 'When she found Ireland, her whole life really changed.' On March 26 1993, Annie left her apartment in Dublin to spend the day at Wicklow Mountains, going alone after inviting a friend to go with her. After she was spotted that afternoon getting the bus to Glencullen, there was an alleged sighting of someone matching her description at Johnnie Fox's Pub. The woman spoke with a man who was in his twenties and wearing a waxed jacket. He has never been identified. After the alleged sighting at the pub, Annie was never heard or seen again, with many people believing she had been murdered - but the case has never been solved. What is Ireland's 'Vanishing Triangle' and who were the eight women who disappeared? In 1993, America-born Annie McCarrick disappeared while living in Dublin. Her case was the first of several that would become known as the Vanishing Triangle disappearances. In each case, a young or middle-aged woman vanished suddenly from the eastern part of Ireland and no trace of them was ever found. Police officially linked six of the disappearances and launched a joint investigation called Operation Trace in 1998, before the crimes stopped. Annie McCarrick. Born in New York in 1966, she lived there until relocating to Ireland in 1987. At the time she vanished she was living in the Dublin area. The last confirmed sighting of her was in Enniskerry in 1993. McCarrick was later reported drinking at a pub in Glencullen with a man who has never been identified. She has not been heard from since. Jo Jo Dullard. Born in 1974 in Callan, Jo Jo was also living in Dublin around the time of her disappearance. She was travelling from Dublin to Callan in July 1995 when she vanished. Jo Jo made a phone call from a payphone in Moone and witnesses said she was later seen leaning on the back of a dark coloured Toyota, talking to someone inside. The car and driver were never traced. She remains missing. Fiona Pender. A life-long resident of Tullamore, where she was born in 1971, Fiona went missing in August 1996 while seven months pregnant. She was last seen leaving home by her boyfriend. In 2008 a small cross bearing her name was found along the The Slieve Bloom Way, but her body has never been recovered. Fiona Sinnott. Born in Rosslare, Fiona was living in nearby Broadway when she vanished in 1998 at the age of 19. She was the mother of an 11-month-old. The last confirmed sighting of her was at a pub with friends, which she left around midnight accompanied by ex-partner Sean Carroll, the father of her daughter. He says he slept on her sofa, and when he left the next morning she was in bed planning a trip to the doctor. Ciara Breen. She was living with her mother in Dundalk when she vanished in 1998, aged 17. Her mother recalls the pair going to bed around midnight before she got up to use the bathroom around 2am and found Ciara gone. Ciara's window was open and left on the latch, suggesting she planned to return, but she never did. Deidre Jacob. The Newbridge native was studying in Twickenham, London, but had returned home for the summer before vanishing in 1998. She was spotted within just yards of her parents' house by multiple witnesses, but never made it home. A seventh case, not included in Operation Trace but often referenced alongside the disappearances, is that of Eva Brennan. Eva vanished in July 1993 shortly after a family lunch in Terenure, Dublin. She was depressed prior to her disappearance. She was known to visit her parents every day but failed to show on the next two occasions, so her father went to her home and found her gone. She has not been seen since. Similarly, Imelda Keenan vanished from Waterford city, where she had been studying. She was reported missing on the morning of January 3, 1994 last seen in a pair of leopard-skin trousers and a denim jacket. She told her fiancée that she was going out to the post office and was last seen walking past a bridge walked past the William Street Bridge in Waterford city. SUSPECTS None of the Vanishing Triangle women have ever been found so investigators have very little evidence to link the crimes, save geographical area and the suddenness of their disappearance. One potential suspect touted in the past was Larry Murphy, who was jailed for the rape and attempted murder of a young woman in Carlow in 2001. Murphy had kidnapped the woman, put her in the boot of his car and taken her to the Wicklow Mountains where she was repeatedly raped. He then tried to strangle the victim to death but two hunters happened upon the scene, saved the woman, and helped identify Murphy as the attacker, leading to his arrest. Murphy has been questioned over the Vanishing Triangle cases but has always denied being connected with any of them. The alarm was raised when Annie did not show up at a part-time café job the following day to collect her wages, and failed to go to a dinner party. In July 2020, Michael Griffith, a lawyer her father John hired in 1993, now joined forces with Kenneth Strange, a former FBI agent, and Annie's uncle, John Covell, as well as an Irish private investigator, Brian McCarthy, to try to solve the mystery of what happened to Annie. The American team came up with the theory that Annie was not at Johnnie Fox's Pub, in the village of Glencullen, as previously believed. Instead, they have identified a new 'prime suspect' after becoming aware of a witness statement given to Gardaí in 1993. Mr McCarthy said they had identified a new suspect whom they think Annie was with in a café in Enniskerry. The witness, who has since died, alleged that Annie had been in the café with a man who fit the description of a suspect McCarthy has identified. Mr McCarthy called the sighting 'more crucial than initially thought'. There have been several attempts to uncover the person behind Annie's disappearance. Gardaí have carried out extensive investigations into the disappearances but so far have had no breakthrough in solving them. In 2008, the Garda brought a team of FBI agents to Ireland to review the evidence they had accumulated. These experienced profilers, who specialise in investigating serial killers in the United States, concluded that the unknown killer matched the profile of one Larry Murphy, who was jailed for the rape and attempted murder of a young woman in Carlow in 2001. Murphy had kidnapped the woman, put her in the boot of his car and taken her to the Wicklow Mountains where she was repeatedly raped. He then tried to strangle the victim to death but two hunters happened upon the scene, saved the woman, and helped identify Murphy as the attacker, leading to his arrest. Murphy has been questioned over the Vanishing Triangle cases but has always denied being connected with any of them. Meanwhile in 2014, retired detective sergeant Alan Bailey claimed that a member of the Provisional IRA may have killed Annie. At the time, he told RTÉ's Today with Sean O'Rourke programme that the American student met the IRA man, to whom he gave a fictional name Manus Dunne, at Johnnie Fox's pub in Glencullen in the Dublin mountains. Mr Bailey said that he 'started bragging about different exploits', naming colleagues before 'realising the enormity of what he had done'. The retired detective sergeant wrote that Manus offered a lift into town but 'drove her up the mountains where he killed her and concealed her body behind some bushes'. He said the information from a 'very reliable source', was a story that 'needs to be checked out'. Meanwhile in 2018, police in Ireland began investigating whether a married father-of-two shot dead after murdering a student had been involved in Annie's killing. Mark Hennessy, 40, was killed by officers hunting for missing Jastine Valdez, 24, near Dublin in 2023 before her body was discovered. Garda sources told the Irish Times that Hennessy's DNA profile would be checked against historic and recent disappearances to see if he was a serial killer. As part of that review, officers reexamined the infamous Vanishing Triangle cases of the 1990s, where a series of young women disappeared without trace over the course of five years, to see if Hennnessy could be responsible. The victims include Annie McCarrick alongside Fiona Pender, Deirdre Jacob, Jo Jo Dullard, Fiona Sinnott, Eva Brennan and Ciara Breen. Hennessy would have been aged just 16 when Annie disappeared in 1993, but her case is still being included in the review. Former detective Alan Bailey, who investigated Annie's disappearance 30 years ago, has said that his 'one regret' is that he was never able to find out what happened to Annie and the other 'Vanishing Triangle' victims. What's more, the former detective said he is confident that Annie's murderer is still at large. He now believes the investigating team should speak with Murphy. The former detective claims he tried to interview Murphy while he was a prisoner at Arbour Hill - but the criminal refused. At the time, Bailey says they had to respect his decision not to be questioned - whereas officers are now able to get a court warrant to speak with prisoners. However, it has since been reported that Murphy did speak with officers as part of the ongoing 'Vanishing Triangle' investigations. In 2005, Murphy emerged as a 'person of interest' in the investigation into the murder of Deirdre Jacob. The 20-year-old, who had been studying in Twickenham, London, vanished outside of a post office - just yards from her parents house in Newbridge in 1998. In 2010, the Irish Mail on Sunday revealed that Murphy had been doing work for Deirdre's grandmother in her sweetshop at the time the 18-year-old vanished from Newbridge, Co. Kildare. Garda sources revealed Murphy was carrying out carpentry work at the shop, which Deirdre visited just hours before she went missing. In August 2010, Murphy was released from prison after serving 10 of his 15 year jail sentence.

Body recovered in Lewisville Lake as search for second missing boater continues
Body recovered in Lewisville Lake as search for second missing boater continues

CBS News

time19-06-2025

  • CBS News

Body recovered in Lewisville Lake as search for second missing boater continues

Searchers have recovered the body of a man from Lewisville Lake, according to the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. Meanwhile, the search continued Thursday for a second missing person, described as female, as the effort entered its third day, TPWD said. Advanced sonar joins search The Texas Game Warden Underwater Search and Recovery Team joined the effort, deploying advanced sonar technology to help locate the two missing boaters, a TPWD spokesperson said. Maggie Berger, public information officer for law enforcement at TPWD, said the agency is not identifying the two boaters "out of respect for their family's wishes." She added that the Denton County Medical Examiner's Office "may be able to release his name." Boat found abandoned Tuesday Texas Game Wardens were initially dispatched to the scene on Tuesday after receiving a report of an abandoned vessel. Despite initial efforts, the boaters were not located before nightfall, TPWD officials said. Multi-agency effort continues The search resumed early Wednesday morning, with Game Wardens joined by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers as they combed the area. Efforts continued Thursday with the addition of the Underwater Search and Recovery Team, according to TPWD. Officials said the investigation is ongoing. Updates to follow CBS News Texas will provide updates as more information becomes available.

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