British police arrive on Greek island in search for missing toddler Ben Needham
Ben Needham went missing at the age of 21 months on a holiday to the island of Kos
A TEAM of British police officers has arrived on the Greek island of Kos to examine a mound of earth and rubble close to where toddler Ben Needham went missing 21 years ago.
• Toddler Ben Needham disappeared from Kos in 1991
• South Yorkshire Police begins specialist operation
The officers are leading a group of specialist search advisers who will be supporting the Greek authorities as they decide whether to excavate the mound, South Yorkshire Police said.
Ben, from Sheffield, vanished on the island in July 1991, when he was 21 months old, after his mother and grandparents moved there from Sheffield.
Despite a number of possible sightings and a range of theories about what happened to him, no trace of the youngster has been found.
His mother, Kerry Needham, has spent two decades looking for her son and has consistently said she believes he was abducted and is still alive.
Yesterday, a South Yorkshire Police spokeswoman said: “South Yorkshire Police is leading a team of specialist search advisers
who have travelled o the Greek island of Kos to support the Greek authorities as they search for missing Sheffield toddler Ben Needham.
“Greek police are pursuing a line of inquiry centred on the grounds of the property from which Ben disappeared in 1991.
“Work will begin to examine the ground, including using geophysical ground examination equipment, to determine whether any area should be dug.”
The spokeswoman said other specialist resources had been deployed, including employing a forensic archaeologist and using search dogs.
She said the operation is expected to last a week to ten days and follows a Greek police request for specialist support.
She added: “During the past 18 months, South Yorkshire Police has also reviewed all material held by the Greek police in relation to Ben’s disappearance in order to support the Greek inquiry.
“South Yorkshire Police (SYP) has also obtained Ben’s DNA from Sheffield Children’s Hospital. SYP has for a number of years supported Ben’s mum Kerry and other members of the family.”
Mrs Needham, 41, said: “This is an elimination process and that’s how I’m dealing with it. It’s one of the most important things to happen in 21 years.”
The new search is centred on a large mound which is now grassed over.
It is near a farmhouse next to the one Ben’s grandparents were renovating in 1991. One theory is that it is building material which was dumped at the time the toddler went missing and the youngster could have been accidentally buried beneath it.
Mrs Needham has said in previous interviews she believes the large mound was already there when Ben disappeared.
Earlier this year, she said: “I find it very, very unlikely that Ben is there, unless he buried himself.”
MP Angela Smith, who has supported Mrs Needham and her family, said she believed the search was important as it ruled out another line of inquiry.
“Hopefully they won’t find Ben in that rubble and it closes down another line of inquiry and narrows down the possibilities,” she said.
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Thursday 20 June 2013
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