Up to 50 migrants tortured and thrown overboard from small boat after being accused of witchcraft on crossing, cops fear

POLICE have said for the first time they believe “at least” 50 migrants were tortured and thrown overboard on a boat heading to the Canary Islands.

The victims are feared to have been accused of witchcraft on the horror crossing from Africa.

A group of migrants on a "cayuco" boat being rescued at sea by a Spanish Salvamento Maritimo vessel.
AFP

Migrant boats are common heading for the Canary Islands[/caption]

A rescue worker in blue gloves carries a bundled migrant child off a red coast guard vessel.
Reuters

A rescue worker carries a migrant child while disembarking on Gran Canaria[/caption]

Police escorting migrants off a bus.
Solarpix

Police have detained a number of migrants over the suspected deaths[/caption]

Migrant arrest by Spanish police.
Solarpix

Witnesses described seeing the the horror scenes on the boat[/caption]

The first allegations of mass high seas executions on board the overcrowded vessel emerged at the start of the month.

It came as 248 survivors were rescued off the African coast and taken to Gran Canaria.

Detectives began investigating after witnesses brought ashore claimed to have seen fellow migrants beaten up and shot by people smugglers.

The gang accused them of being witches when they suffered engine problems and started running out of food.

Subsequent reports said 17 men – 16 Senegalese nationals and one Gambian – had been arrested and remanded in custody by a Spanish judge probing the allegations.

Today police said 19 suspects had been detained as they released the first images of the arrests and detailed for the first time in an official statement the results of their inquiries into the nightmare Atlantic crossing so far.

The migrants were brought ashore at Arguineguin on Gran Canaria’s southern coast on August 25.

It was a day after the overcrowded vessel – known as a cayuco – was rescued off the African city of Dakhla 265 miles from the Canaries by Spanish coastguards after Moroccan officials said they were unable to help.

A spokesman for Spain’s National Police in Gran Canaria said today, as the force released footage of the suspects being hauled handcuffed onto a bus from refugee reception centres.

He said: “National Police officers have arrested 19 people on suspicion of murders and torture on board a cayuco rescued on August 24.

The vessel was adrift in waters off Gran Canaria and 248 migrants were in it, although one subsequently died in hospital.

“Several migrants who were travelling in it spoke of murders, wounding and torture committed during the crossing.

“The disappearance of at least 50 people thrown into the sea by the alleged people smugglers is also being investigated.

“All of those held, who were travelling in the same boat, have been remanded in custody after appearing in court.”

The police force added: “The investigation points to the vessel having left Senegal initially with around 300 people on board, with the estimated disappearance of at least 50 migrants during the 11 days the journey apparently lasted.

“The boat, made of wood and around 65ft long, was located adrift by Spanish Coastguard vessel Guardamar Urania, which took the 248 occupants to Argenenguin.

“According to statements taken from witnesses, several of the migrants arrested not only piloted the cayuco, but also assaulted dozens of people, hitting them and mistreating them in several ways.

“In some cases they threw migrants while they were still alive overboard into the ocean as well as refusing to help those who accidentally fell into the water.

“The witnesses point to the disappearance of around 30 people thrown overboard, although investigators calculate more than 50 people died or disappeared on the basis that the cayuco left Senegal with around 300 people on board.

“The causes of these deaths, according to the witness testimony gathered, is that they are allegedly related to superstitions that identified as ‘witches’ certain people on the boat when incidents occurred during the crossing, such as engine failures, lack of food or bad weather.

“Likewise homicides have been documented for the simple reason that some people protested or showed their inconformity with the travel conditions.

A rescue ship carrying immigrants on the water near El Hierro island.
EPA

Immigrants arrive at La Restinga harbor on El Hierro island, Canary Islands, Spain[/caption]

Rescued migrants wrapped in red blankets disembark from a maritime rescue vessel at Arrecife port.
EPA

Migrants disembark from the vessel ‘La Salvamar Al Nair’ at Arrecife port in Lanzarote[/caption]

Immigrants are assisted upon arrival at La Restinga harbor on El Hierro island by police and sea rescue ships after being rescued from a small wooden boat.
EPA

Immigrants are assisted upon arrival at La Restinga harbor on El Hierro island, Canary Islands, Spain[/caption]

“The 19 suspects identified are being investigated on suspicion of people trafficking, homicide, wounding and torture.”

The jail remand decision was taken by a duty judge at a court in San Bartolome de Tirajana in Gran Canaria who questioned the suspects as well as the four survivors described locally as ‘protected witnesses’.

It is not known if the men held answered questions or retained their right to silence.

In June Spanish police confirmed they had launched an investigation after the bodies of five migrants were found in the sea off the Balearic Islands with their hands and feet bound.

Initial speculation centred on the possibility they could have been murdered and thrown overboard.

The families of the men who died, all Somalians, later revealed they were shackled in a death ritual after they perished from starvation as they tried to reach Europe.

They had been on a boat that was rescued on May 8 by Spanish coastguards 62 miles from Alicante, with 16 male survivors suffering dehydration and other health problems and a dead man on board.

The vessel had left Algeria a fortnight earlier before it was left adrift following engine problems.

During their trip they ended up having to eat just one date a day and drink their own urine, with the men whose bodies were recovered from the Mediterranean said to have fatally opted to drink sea water to try to survive.

Red Cross chiefs said after their rescue: “One of the people rescued had eaten toothpaste because it was the only thing he had.

“He didn’t want to let go of the tube when he reached dry land.”

Canary Islands migrant ’emergency’

By Georgie English

OFFICIALS on the Canary Islands are demanding a state of emergency be declared to combat the growing migrant crisis.

Around 47,000 people arrived on the Spainish islands on small boats last year with government officials saying the number of unaccompanied minors has reached almost three times the official capacity.

This year alone, from January 1, to May 15, 10,882 people have reached the Canaries via maritime routes.

Many of these include young children with the government now admitting they are struggling to keep them all safe due to the volume of those arriving.

The popular holiday islands have a recognised capacity to house 1,737 migrant children.

But the number coming over from parts of West Africa across the Atlantic Ocean have skyrocketed recently with 5,017 minors now on the archipelago.

Concerned officials on the Canary Islands formally asked the Spanish government to declare a migration emergency after the figures were revealed.

A decree was reportedly approved last week by Spain’s Council of Ministers.

The Ministry of Youth and Children are now set to officially declare the emergency which will allow for a reform of the Immigration Law to be activated.

This will see the unhoused minors be transferred from the Canary Islands across to mainland Spain.

It comes as the government admitted the massive surge of immigrants arriving to the Canary Islands poses a “security risk”.

READ MORE HERE

September 17, 2025
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What now for Brueckner? Freed Madeleine McCann suspect’s safe house, tag & no passport amid fears he could still vanish

CHRISTIAN Brueckner was allowed to walk free from prison today – but what next for the Madeleine McCann prime suspect?

The convicted paedophile, 48, hid his face behind a blanket as he was given a police escort to a safe house in Germany where he will have to abide to a strict set of rules as part of his release.

Christian Brueckner in court.
Dan Charity

Christian Brueckner has been freed from prison in Germany today[/caption]

German police vehicles on a road.
Dan Charity

A police convoy took Bruckner to a safe house after his release[/caption]

A person in the back seat of a car, partially obscured by a colorful patterned bag, with only their right arm and shoulder visible.
Dan Charity

The convicted paedophile covered his face with a blanket as his car sped past reporters[/caption]

Photo of Madeleine McCann wearing an Everton Football Club shirt.
Handout

Brueckner remains the only suspect for investigators in the disappearance of Brit toddler Maddie[/caption]

Brueckner remains the only suspect for investigators in the disappearance of Brit toddler Maddie.

And his dark criminal past means he continues to be viewed as a potential danger to society by prosecutors.

One even warned ahead of his release that the public has “to expect him to commit further crimes”.

In order to keep tracks of Brueckner he has been fitted with an electronic tag.

He will have to wear it at all times so police can keep an eye on his movements.

The device will be geo-fenced to three-miles around his new permanent home.

This means cops will be alerted instantly if he steps outside the zone without permission.

Brueckner will also be forced to surrender his passport and will be given a new government-issued ID card.

Cops believe this will help to limit his movements outside of Germany should the suspect ever try to run.

But flight fears are still lingering for prosecutors who are yet to have enough evidence to charge Brueckner with a crime relating to Maddie.

His ankle tag will stop working the moment the sex offender exits German borders.

Investigators also worry Brueckner could flee Germany despite his conditions due to him not needing a passport to move freely within mainland Europe.

The other details around police surveillance of Brueckner’s movements remains unclear.

But the monitoring is expected to remain in place until his next scheduled court appearance in October.

These will be over claims he verbally abused a prisoner governor while inside.

Over in Britain, Metropolitan Police detectives are still fighting to find justice for the McCann family after 18 long years.

They had filed a bid to allow them to interview Brueckner and try to finally crack the case.

Brueckner’s dark past

CHRISTIAN Brueckner’s criminal record spans decades.

He was jailed in 1994 for sexually abusing children, convicted again of child sex abuse in 2016, and was living in Portugal at the time of Madeleine’s disappearance.

He was later convicted of raping the American tourist in Praia da Luz in 2005 – just yards from the McCann holiday complex – but was cleared last year in a separate rape and sexual abuse case.

A Sun investigation this year — aired on Channel 4 — revealed bombshell new evidence, including his obsession with snatching blonde girls.

But prosecutors are adamant he remains their focus.

Wolters has previously said: “There is no one else. He is the only suspect.”

As part of their bid, Met detectives also applied to German investigators for formal legal assistance.

The status would give them access to all German files and witnesses amid apparent new interest from UK detectives in the case.

It follows claims from Germany that British intervention could be crucial to any hopes of keeping the case going.

Brueckner is believed to have turned down any interview request.

Why has Brueckner been freed?

The fiend was released from a German jail after serving time for raping a 72-year-old American tourist in Portugal.

Today marks the date his seven-year sentence for rape expires – allowing him to walk out of prison and re-enter society.

Brueckner, a drifter with a long history of sex offences against women and children, remains the only suspect in Madeleine’s disappearance.

Despite spending years investigating Brueckner, German lead prosecutor Hans Christian Wolters has admitted his team still doesn’t have enough evidence to bring charges over her disappearance.

German police officers apprehending an individual by the roadside, with spectators and a police van in the background.
EPA

Cops had to wrestle away journalists as Brueckner drove away[/caption]

Journalists and camera crews filming alongside a police officer.
Getty

Journalists gathered outside Brueckner’s jail waiting for him to exit[/caption]

Police officers standing in front of a building.
AFP

Police officers entering the high-security prison in Sehnde near Hanover where Brueckner had been serving his sentence[/caption]

He previously told reporters: “He is not just our number one suspect, he’s our only suspect.

“We have evidence against him but in our view it’s not strong enough to make a guilty verdict likely.”

Brueckner officially left the high-security prison in Sehnde near Hanover just after 9:15am German time, this morning.

The rapist was given breakfast before being driven away in his lawyer’s black Audi A6.

A chilling image showed Brueckner wearing a red and white striped shirt as he sat in the rear seat with his hand up in the air.

He covered his face with a blanket as the car sped past reporters.

Brueckner has always denied any involvement in Madeleine’s disappearance.

His release comes as a bitter blow to Madeleine’s devastated parents – Kate and Gerry McCann – who have endured 18 years of anguish searching for answers.

The Brit tot was only three years old when she vanished from a holiday apartment in Praia da Luz, Portugal, in May 2007.

The parents were dining with friends in a nearby tapas restaurant on the night their daughter vanished, returning at 10pm to find her gone while her twin siblings slept.

The McCann case quickly became one of the biggest missing persons investigations in history and has seen multiple suspects let go and dead ends found.

Black Audi RS 6 Avant driving past police officers and a police van.
Dan Charity

The rapist was given breakfast before being driven away in his lawyer’s black Audi A6[/caption]

A person's hand with a striped cuff holding a blue and white object inside a car, viewed through a tinted window.
Dan Charity

He covered his face with a blanket as the car sped past reporters[/caption]

Map showing three search sites in Portugal during the Maddie Hunt investigation.

This week, a new lead has emerged after a notorious network of paedophiles linked to a serial child-killer were feared to have ordered Maddie’s kidnapping.

A former top Belgian official, who led the inquiry into the murderer and child-molester Marc Dutroux, says a gang of traffickers could be connected to her disappearance.

Three days before the girl was snatched in 2007, Belgian cops had issued an alert to European police forces over intelligence that a paedophile gang had ordered a small child to be snatched.

It comes as a Sun investigation — aired on Channel 4 earlier this year — revealed the existence of a hard drive and laptop containing images from Portugal, closely linked to the belief held by cops that Madeleine is in fact dead.

TIMELINE OF THE MADDY CASE

HERE’S a timeline of the case which has gripped the world.

May 3, 2007

Madeleine McCann disappears from her family’s holiday apartment in Praia da Luz, Portugal, sparking a massive police search and becoming one of the most famous missing persons cases in history.

January 15, 2016

Neighbour reports a possible ‘grave’ at Brueckner’s abandoned factory in East Germany.

Cops find disturbing images on USB sticks and launch a full-scale search.

February 16, 2016

Christian Brueckner is convicted for abusing a girl of five in a park after images found on his laptop.

He was sentenced to 15-months behind bars but was already on the run by then.

May 3, 2017

Around this time, Helge B calls an information hotline after watching a ten-year anniversary special on the disappearance of Madeleine McCann.

He reports an alleged confession by Christian Brueckner.

September 27, 2018

On-the-run Christian Brueckner is arrested over outstanding drugs claims in Italy.

He is extradited to Germany the following year.

December 16, 2019

Christian Brueckner was convicted, in Germany, for the 2005 rape of an American woman in Praia da Luz, Portugal, after his DNA was matched to a hair found on her bed.

He was sentenced to seven years behind bars.

June 4, 2020

German prosecutors reveal to the world they have a suspect in custody under investigation for the abduction of Madeleine McCann.

For the first time they claim Madeleine is dead.

German media later name him as Christian B (Christian Brueckner).

June 23, 2023

In his first interview, witness Helge B alleges to German newspaper Bild that Christian Brueckner all-but-confessed the Madeleine abduction to him, by allegedly saying “she didn’t scream” as they talked about the case, at a music festival, in Spain.

February 16, 2024

Brueckner goes on trial accused of none-McCann allegations of rape and sex assault, in Braunschweig, Germany.

Prosecutors hope for a conviction to keep him behind bars permanently and lead to McCann charges.

October 8, 2024

Brueckner was acquitted of all claims.

Prosecutors launch an appeal, however. Decision pending.

June 1, 2025

Police order a renewed search for clues in Praia Da Luz on the Algarve in Portugal.

It lasts for just three days.

September 17, 2025

Christian Brueckner released from jail after serving sentence for rape and allowed to walk free.

Aerial view of a prison at night, with illuminated buildings inside a walled perimeter.
AFP

An aerial shot of the jail where the convicted paedophile had been caged[/caption]

Man in blue blazer holding documents being escorted by two blurry officers.
AFP

Prosecutors deem Brueckner dangerous and fear he may commit further crimes[/caption]

September 17, 2025
Read More >>

Child killer Marc Dutroux’s horror crimes laid bare after paedo ring linked to sicko ‘ordered Madeleine McCann’s kidnap’

PAEDOPHILE serial killer Marc Dutroux tortured, raped and murdered girls as young as eight in a case that shocked Europe.

Dutroux, now 68, kept his kidnapped victims chained up in a dungeon – earning his infamous nickname as Le Monstre, or The Monster.

A police handout photo of Marc Dutroux.
AFP

Marc Dutroux, the paedophile at the centre of Belgium’s child abduction and murder scandal, in 1996[/caption]

Belgian convicted child rapist Marc Dutroux leaves the Justice Palace.
Reuters

Convicted child rapist Marc Dutroux leaves the Justice Palace of Neufchateau, southern Belgium[/caption]

A smiling young girl in a pink hat, white shirt, and pink shorts holds several tennis balls on a tennis court.
Collect

Madeleine McCann was three when she vanished while on holiday in Praia da Luz, Portugal, in May 2007[/caption]

A man in a light blue jacket and striped shirt looks at the camera, standing in what appears to be a courtroom next to another person in dark robes.
Dan Charity

Prime suspect and paedophile Christian Brueckner is set for release from jail[/caption]

It comes as a notorious network of paedophiles linked to Dutroux ordered the kidnap of Madeleine McCann, it is feared.

Two of his six known victims starved to death, locked up in his soundproof cellar in Charleroi, Belgium.

The psychopath is also believed to have murdered at least two other girls and sold other children into slavery abroad in a four-year reign of terror – helped by his own wife and other accomplices.

It only ended in 1996 after cops rescued two kidnap victims aged 12 and 14 who had been held captive in the dungeon.

He was arrested in 1996 and jailed for life in 2004 and is thought to have links to European networks of child-sex traffickers.

A former top Belgian official, who led the inquiry into the murderer and child molester Dutroux, says a gang of traffickers could be connected to Madeleine’s disappearance.

Cops investigating prime suspect and paedophile Christian Brueckner — set for release from jail tomorrow — are taking the claims seriously.

Madeleine was three when she vanished while on holiday in Praia da Luz, Portugal, in May 2007.

Three days earlier Belgian cops had issued an alert to European police forces over intelligence that a paedophile gang had ordered a small child to be snatched.

Marc Verwilghen, who served as Belgium’s justice minister for three years, told The Sun: “I have never had access to the Madeleine McCann files.

“All I can say is as soon as I heard about the case I had deja vu — because it reminded me straight away of Dutroux.

“When you look at the case it is of course possible Madeleine was stolen to order. The alert that was sent looks like it must have come from Belgian police and it should have been taken seriously.

“Dutroux investigators uncovered reports of possible paedophile rings operating in Belgium at that time but couldn’t finish their enquiry as this was focused on Dutroux, handling him as a lone actor.”

Admitting many “similarities” between the cases, Mr Verwilghen added: “It was clear paedophile networks and child- trafficking really did exist in Europe — we know this since Dutroux, but the enquiry committee was never allowed to look into them properly.

“It was clear that these existed to make money.

“These could be informal networks, one person dealing with another, but they existed.

A man in a blue shirt gesturing with his right hand.
Dan Charity

Belgium’s Marc Verwilghen fears a gang of traffickers could be connected to Maddie’s disappearance[/caption]

A young girl with blonde hair and heterochromia (one blue eye and one green eye) looking straight at the camera.
AFP

Three days before Maddie’s disappearance, Belgian cops had issued an alert over intelligence that a paedophile gang had ordered a small child to be snatched[/caption]

White apartment buildings with balconies and a gray car parked on the street.
The apartment complex that Maddie disappeared from in Praia Da Luz, Portugal

“The Dutroux case showed us the abduction of children took organisation and planning and more than one person to make this work.

“Intelligence suggests a paedophile ring in Belgium made an order for a young girl three days before Madeleine McCann was taken. Somebody connected to this group saw Maddie, took a photograph of her and sent it to Belgium. The purchaser agreed that the girl was suitable and Maddie was taken.”

The Belgian police warning first emerged in 2008 when a fax was released as part of a bundle of files surrounding the McCann case.

In 2016, British cops probing her disappearance started looking into a gang of European traffickers, but the theory has never been publicly linked to German Brueckner.

Officials investigating the rapist believe Madeleine was likely stolen to order rather than being snatched by a “lone wolf”.

But their probe is focused solely on his alleged role and not on any wider paedophile network.

A source close to the case in Germany said yesterday: “Police take seriously the claims that emerged from Belgium — that ­Maddie was ordered to be stolen.

“They believe there is no way whoever took her could have been acting alone — that would have made no sense.

“But there is not interest in the network, which creates too many new agencies and they want to keep their focus on the current suspect.”

Collage of a satellite map showing three search sites in Portugal, including barns and a well, related to the "Maddie Hunt," with an inset map showing the location of Praia da Luz and the broader European context.

Map highlighting key locations related to Christian Brueckner: the Ocean Club, a villa where he committed rape, his former cottage, and three areas of interest (A, B, C) for police searches.

Timeline of Maddie’s disappearence

HERE’S a timeline of the case which has gripped the world:

May 3, 2007

Madeleine McCann disappears from her family’s holiday apartment in Praia da Luz, Portugal, sparking a massive police search and becoming one of the most famous missing persons cases in history.

January 15, 2016

Neighbour reports a possible ‘grave’ at Brueckner’s abandoned factory in East Germany.

Cops find disturbing images on USB sticks and launch a full-scale search.

February 16, 2016

Christian Brueckner is convicted for abusing a girl of five in a park after images found on his laptop.

He was sentenced to 15-months behind bars but was already on the run by then.

May 3, 2017

Around this time, Helge B calls an information hotline after watching a ten-year anniversary special on the disappearance of Madeleine McCann.

He reports an alleged confession by Christian Brueckner.

September 27, 2018

On-the-run Christian Brueckner is arrested over outstanding drugs claims in Italy.

He is extradited to Germany the following year.

December 16, 2019

Christian Brueckner was convicted, in Germany, for the 2005 rape of an American woman in Praia da Luz, Portugal, after his DNA was matched to a hair found on her bed.

He was sentenced to seven years behind bars.

June 4, 2020

German prosecutors reveal to the world they have a suspect in custody under investigation for the abduction of Madeleine McCann.

For the first time they claim Madeleine is dead.

German media later name him as Christian B (Christian Brueckner).

June 23, 2023

In his first interview, witness Helge B alleges to German newspaper Bild that Christian Brueckner all-but-confessed the Madeleine abduction to him, by allegedly saying “she didn’t scream” as they talked about the case, at a music festival, in Spain.

February 16, 2024

Brueckner goes on trial accused of none-McCann allegations of rape and sex assault, in Braunschweig, Germany.

Prosecutors hope for a conviction to keep him behind bars permanently and lead to McCann charges.

October 8, 2024

Brueckner was acquitted of all claims.

Prosecutors launch an appeal, however. Decision pending.

September 17, 2025

Date on which Christian Brueckner will be released from custody without action being taken.

Prosecutors require an arrest warrant for a retrial over claims from last year – or over the McCann case.

June 1, 2025

Police order a renewed search for clues in Praia Da Luz on the Algarve in Portugal.

It lasts for just three days.

September 16, 2025
Read More >>