Corrie McKeague’s girlfriend announces birth of missing RAF airman’s baby on Father’s Day
THE girlfriend of missing Corrie McKeague has announced the birth of his baby girl on Father's Day - nearly nine months after he mysteriously disappeared.
April Oliver, 21, posted a heartwarming picture of her cradling the beautiful newborn and said that her "daddy would be so proud" and "would love you as much as I do."
The tot, who has not yet been named, could be seen sleeping peacefully with her tiny hand outstretched from beneath a blanket.
April didn't confirm when the baby was born and simply posted two hearts and an unicorn emoji alongside the heartwarming image on her Facebook page yesterday .
Around a dozen of people had 'liked' the picture just an hour after she posted it, including the little one's proud grandmother Nicola Urquhart.
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April, from Downham Market, Norfolk, was hospitalised two weeks ago after doctors feared the stresses of Corrie still being missing may harm the baby.
She revealed she was expecting Corrie's child two weeks after his disappearance last September.
But the RAF gunner's father Martin McKeague claimed last month that Corrie knew she was pregnant days before he went missing.
April, who had been dating Corrie for around five months before he went missing, previously shared a poignant black and white image of her baby bump.
In an emotional message to her unborn baby, she wrote: "You bring me so much pain yet just as much joy.
"Your daddy would be so proud of you, my little one and would love you as much as I do.
"Corrie will be part of both of us forever, no one can take that away."
Corrie, 23, was last seen in the early hours of Sunday, September 24, after a night out in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk.
Police specialists believe that Corrie is in a landfill site in Milton, Cambridgeshire, after CCTV footage last saw him entering a refuge area behind a Greggs in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk.
Corrie's mobile phone was tracked following a similar route to that of a bin lorry, which was found to have carried weight akin to a human body.
Police have been searching the landfill for more than 14 weeks, and have sifted through 4,000 tonnes of waste.
Police confirmed this week that they will be deciding on whether to carry on with the investigation at the landfill site after finding no trace of Corrie during the search.
The huge £1m search could move to an incinerator site if his body is not found in the site.
Writing on the Find Corrie Facebook page on Friday, Nicola, 48, said: "The process the police are using, without going into too much detail, is they pick an amount of rubbish up with heavy mechanical machinery and then lay it on the ground for the search team police officers to rake through, looking for Corrie, but also looking for items as small as his keys or phone.
"Whilst doing this they continue to look for Greggs branded rubbish along with items that can date and give a location, this all takes time.
"However it does mean they would not miss Corrie if he is there.
"All though this sounds like a basic and simple way of searching It, so many other possible things have been considered and a huge amount of work has been carried out to ascertain there viability such as probes for certain gases, ground penetrating radar, specialist dogs have been used where appropriate.
"We still feel confident that if Corrie is in the landfill the methods Suffolk Police are using will find him."
Corrie is originally from Fife in Scotland and moved down to Suffolk to live at RAF Honington where he worked as a gunner and team medic in the air force.
Anyone with information about his disappearance is asked to call the incident room at Suffolk Police on 01473 782019.
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