With the US' Rihanna operation turning into a bit of a ghost town the UK
has decided that it is now their moment in the spotlight. For this the
UK has been relying on its favourite topic- child sex abuse. So in the
past week we've had a frankly less then earth shattering BBC News
investigation that British paedophiles use Internet web-cams to sexually
abuse children in specifically the Philippines and by implication
Thailand and Cambodia.
This past week has also seen the start of several high-profile celebrity
child sex abuse trials stemming from the Jimmy Savile investigation.
The most notable of these has been the trial of William Roache. Through a
very bizarre interview about child-sex abuse given to New Zealand
television Roache was of course used to lay out the UK's objectives for
Rihanna's concerts in Australia and New Zealand.
The problem is that the UK seems to be constantly going on about child
sex abuse as if it were one of its favourite hobbies. Therefore all
these trials and news investigations have somewhat faded into the
general background noise. So in an effort to add an element of interest
stirring drama to the issue we've had the search for Mikaeel Kular a
three year old boy who was reported missing from his bed in Scotland by
his mother at around 07:15 on Thursday (16/1/14). As it has always
seemed unlikely that a three year old would be able to get dressed and
leave the family apartment building on his own the suspicion has always
been that he was kidnapped by paedophiles.
With no evidence to prove otherwise though the police began by treating
this as a missing persons case and appealed to the local and national
media for help. This led to the case getting almost wall to wall
coverage with Sky News in particular seeming to cover no other news
story. The police search operation seems to have been pretty standard
with the police setting up a cordoned off search area and then bringing
lots of extra officers to methodically search this large cordoned area.
On Friday (17/1/14) the police set up search teams made up of members of
the public supervised by the police. This was extremely similar to the
scenes that followed the disappearance of April Jones in October 2012.
Despite all these well intentioned search efforts the thing that has
been at the back of everybody's mind is that Mikaeel mother's claim that
she put him to bed at around 21:00 on Wednesday (15/1/14) and then
overnight he either voluntarily left or was kidnapped from the family
home without her noticing is a little difficult to believe. That draws
comparisons between this case and the Madeline McCann case whose parents
claim was abducted by Saudi Arabian, paedophile, gypsy people smugglers
from their holiday villa in Portugal in 2007. Everyone else though
thinks that the McCanns simply killed their daughter and were then
forced to make up increasingly elaborate lies to cover up that fact.
Since then the McCann case has become a device for the UK to discuss a
whole range of things will a whole range of people but has always been
focused on the UK's difficult relationship with the European Union (EU).
For example there is currently a UK led police investigation into the
McCann case going on in Portugal which is rumoured to be on the brink of
yielding fresh breakthroughs and the Portuguese detective originally in
charge of the case is currently on trial for liable over a book in
which he claimed Madeline McCann was killed by her parents.
At around 00:00 today (when I'm normally looking at porn) the police
announced that they had discovered a body in a house far outside the
search area. Pending formal identification the police believe the body
to be that of Mikaeel Kular. It has since emerged that the house in
which the body was found belongs to Mikaeel's aunt, used to be his
family home and his mother has been detained by the police. Due to a
small foible with the Scottish legal system "detained" in Scotland means
basically the same as "arrested" does in the rest of the UK and in
Scotland "arrested" means basically the same as "charged" does in the
rest of the UK. This is actually quite similar to the aguido system used
in Portugal.
So while I think the primary purpose is to cause confusion within the EU
and beyond the UK's position does seem to have shifted from criticising
Portugal for claiming that Madeline McCann was killed by her parents to
criticising Portugal for conducting too sloppy an investigation to
prove that Madeline McCann was killed by her parents.
Finally along with the Glasgow helicopter crash this seems intended to
give the impression of stoking up anti-UK feeling within Scotland ahead
of the 2014 referendum on independence which at the moment is pretty
much a done deal for the "No" campaign.
(Originally Posted) 11:35 on 18/1/14 (UK date).
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