Toddler missing for 25 years died in accident, police say

British boy Ben Needham was 21-months when he disappeared on Greek island of Kos

British toddler Ben Needham, who was 21 months old when he vanished near a farmhouse where his family was staying on the Greek island of Kos in July 1991. Photograph: Handout/AFP/Getty Images
British toddler Ben Needham, who was 21 months old when he vanished near a farmhouse where his family was staying on the Greek island of Kos in July 1991. Photograph: Handout/AFP/Getty Images

A British toddler who disappeared on a Greek island 25 years ago may have died as the result of an accident on the day he went missing, British investigators said on Monday.

In a dramatic turn to what is one of Britain's longest-running missing person inquiries, British police wrapped up a search on the island of Kos saying they had recovered an item during a dig thought to belong to the child, Ben Needham.

Ben was 21-months-old when he disappeared while playing outside a farmhouse his family was renovating as a holiday home in 1991.

South Yorkshire Police search officers investigate an olive grove near the scene where toddler Ben Needham went missing over 20 years ago in Kos, Greece. Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA Wire
South Yorkshire Police search officers investigate an olive grove near the scene where toddler Ben Needham went missing over 20 years ago in Kos, Greece. Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA Wire

"It is my professional belief that Ben Needham died as a result of an accident near to the farmhouse here ... where he was last seen playing," Detective Inspector Jon Cousins of South Yorkshire police told journalists.

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It is the first time British police have been so explicit on what they think may have happened to the child on the day he disappeared.

Despite repeated appeals and hundreds of possible sightings, few firm clues have emerged previously on the toddler’s disappearance.

Fresh information surfaced after another public appeal in May. It suggested the possibility the child may have died after being hit by a heavy vehicle, leading police to focus their search on two specific locations.

It is unclear why this information never surfaced before.

There was activity in the area at the time of Ben’s disappearance, with the use of heavy machinery and a large digger.

British police and forensic experts had searched two locations, one in the immediate vicinity of the farmhouse, and a second where it was thought earth was transferred and dumped.

Mr Cousins said an “item” found at one of the sites police were searching two days ago was thought to be in Ben’s possession around the time he went missing. He said that was their initial understanding, and that item had been shown to the child’s family.

“Ben’s family have been provided with a full and thorough account of the events which we know to have taken place and also the speculations that we have been able to discount,” Mr Cousins said.

In 1999 gardaí in Ireland launched an appeal for information about the missing boy following an anonymous note that suggested he had been abducted and brought to Ireland. It was one of a long line of tip-offs after information was passed to the makers of a Greek TV programme in Athens. The note was written in Greek and said "Little Ben is in Ireland, he was abducted by British tourists".

Reuters