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Police chief backs Shannon probe Police chief backs Shannon probe
(10 minutes later)
The chief constable of West Yorkshire has said he is "immensely proud" of the police's handling of the search for Shannon Matthews.The chief constable of West Yorkshire has said he is "immensely proud" of the police's handling of the search for Shannon Matthews.
The nine-year-old was found in a flat in Batley Carr, West Yorkshire, three weeks after going missing.The nine-year-old was found in a flat in Batley Carr, West Yorkshire, three weeks after going missing.
Norman Bettison said he was surprised that the professionalism of the inquiry had been called into question.Norman Bettison said he was surprised that the professionalism of the inquiry had been called into question.
He said:"It has been phenomenal, it has been unprecedented and from where I am standing it's been professional."He said:"It has been phenomenal, it has been unprecedented and from where I am standing it's been professional."
Mr Bettison made a statement to the media after his officers were forced over the weekend to defend the length of time it took to rescue the missing schoolgirl.
She was found hidden in a drawer under a divan bed in Lidgate Gardens, Batley Carr, just one mile from her home in Dewsbury, on Friday afternoon - 24 days after disappearing.
They are extraordinary people doing an extraordinary job Norman Bettison, chief constable of West Yorkshire
Her stepfather's uncle, Michael Donovan, 39, formerly known as Paul Drake, was arrested on suspicion of abduction.
Yorkshire MEP Edward McMillan-Scott said on Saturday that if police had used a missing child alert like those used in other countries, Shannon would have been found sooner.
Mr Bettison said 6,000 people had been interviewed and 3,000 properties had been searched, most of them within a one-mile radius of Dewsbury Moor.
His officers had been working on the case round the clock since 1930 GMT on 19 February.
"These are people who are as excited and thrilled at the news she was found alive and well on Friday morning as the rest of the people of Dewsbury Moor," he said.
"They are extraordinary people doing an extraordinary job, I am proud of every single one of them."