Police are trying to determine whether a photo taken in late August by a Spanish tourist in northern Morocco shows missing British toddler Madeleine McCann being carried by an unidentified woman by the side of a road.
The picture was taken by Clara Torres on August 31 - four months after four-year-old Madeleine went missing.
It is the most recent, but not the first possible sighting, of Madeleine in Morocco.
On May 9, two witnesses - unknown to each other - told police they saw a little girl who looked like Maddie in Marrakech, in the south of the country. There was one other reported sighting in the north, close to the town where Torres took her photo on August 31.
UPDATED
Evening Standard journalist Rashid Razaq, who flew to Morocco from London, said he saw the youngster today. It quickly emerged that the girl in the photograph is believed by villagers to be five-year-old Bushra Binhisa, the daughter of an olive farmer.
This has to be one of the coolest commercials I’ve seen in a long time. It is an ad for the new Citeron C1 and it has Citeron C1’s shaped as a Rubik’s Cube.
Video of the tour through the Aerospace Maintenance And Regeneration Center, AMARC in Tuscon, Arizona.
The 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group (AMARG),[1] often called The Boneyard, is a United States Air Force aircraft storage and maintenance facility in Tucson, Arizona located on Davis-Monthan Air Force Base.
It takes care of more than 4,400 aircraft, including 700 F-4s, whose total original purchase price is estimated at $27 billion. An Air Force Material Command unit, the group is under the command of the 309th Maintenance Wing of Hill Air Force Base, Utah. AMARG was originally meant to store excess Department of Defense and Coast Guard aircraft, but has in recent years been designated the sole respository of out-of-service aircraft from all branches of the U.S. government. via
Have you ever considered taking flying lessons? Have you ever dreamt of owning your own little plane and flying off into the sky whenever it takes your fancy?
Well if you answered yes to any of the above questions, please consider which flying school you attend and please make sure you avoid the one below.