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Missing Scottish aviator Corrie McKeague’s mother tweeted a new photo of him today and said: ‘in just one second our lives will never be the same.
Nicola Urquhart, whose son Corrie was last seen on CCTV entering a container loading area on September 24, 2016, following a night out in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, added: ‘I miss you so much’ while posting the photo of him in a life jacket.
It comes after Nicola said today that it was not yet possible for the police to ‘put her mind at ease’ after human bones were found in Suffolk last week.
A murder investigation was launched after human remains were found in two garbage bags in the River Stour in Sudbury last Thursday.
A post-mortem examination by the Interior Ministry on Sunday was inconclusive, and further forensic evidence is required to establish any form of identification or cause of death.
Nicola Urquhart (right) has said he fears the bones found in the River Stour could be those of his son, RAF gunner Corrie McKeague, who disappeared after a night out in Bury St Edmunds in 2016.
Corrie McKeague was last seen near a container loading area in Bury St Edmunds in 2016. Police searched a landfill near Cambridge looking for her body in March of the following year.
The bones were discovered in the River Stour and police say a post-mortem examination was unable to establish any form of identification or a cause of death and further evidence is needed.
The force said further tests are now being carried out, adding that this will be a “long process.”
Ms Urquhart told the East Anglian Daily Times: “Most of the time that remains or bodies have been found, the Suffolk police have been able to reassure me that it is not Corrie very quickly.
After talking to me, they can tell me that they already think they know who the person is or, for whatever reason, they know that it is not Corrie.
‘Unfortunately, this time around, they haven’t been able to do that.
“So I think the difficult thing is that, whether it’s Corrie or not, this is someone’s son or daughter, and it’s if someone will ever find out because they may not be able to identify who this person is.”
She added: ‘It’s just about trying to keep your head level and not letting your head start making up things and thinking a million thoughts.
“ It’s really hard to wait for an answer because there is as much chance that it is not Corrie as it is Corrie, but it will be someone’s son or daughter.
It’s just horrible.
Suffolk Police officers search the River Stour in Sudbury for traces of evidence after human bones were discovered last Thursday. A murder investigation was launched
Corrie McKeague’s mother, Nicola Urquhart, has said officers have been unable to assure her that the bones found in the Stour River are not those of her son after his disappearance in 2016.
Corrie was last seen in a part of Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, known as the ‘Horseshoe’ at 3.24am on Saturday 24th September 2016, about nine miles from her base at RAF Honington.
He has not been seen since and in October 2018 Suffolk police said they believed his body was in a landfill in Cambridgeshire.
Officers said they believed Corrie, who was 23 years old when she disappeared, climbed into a Biffa container and fell asleep and was taken to the dumpster in Milton.
They came to the conclusion after a meeting with Biffa’s head office, which confirmed that the weight of the container, which was picked up from outside Greggs in the area where Corrie was last seen, weighed 116 kg, much more than the container pick weights from the same place normally. .
Suffolk Police are asking the public for information after the bones were discovered
CCTV of missing RAF military Corrie McKeague on Brentgovel Street in Bury St Edmunds
Suffolk and Norfolk police spent 137 days searching for Corrie at the Milton landfill and going through more than 7,000 tonnes of rubbish as part of a £ 2 million investigation into her disappearance.
Agents conducted two separate search operations in 2017; the first was canceled in July and the second resumed in October and lasted approximately six weeks.
In March 2018, she announced that they announced that her disappearance had been transferred to the main investigation team for unsolved cases.
Last year, on the third anniversary of his disappearance, mother Nicola said she accepted that her son was dead, but said she had not lost hope of finding his remains.