More than three decades on, the disappearance of Ben Needham continues to haunt his family — and now, a sudden new development has reopened old wounds and renewed fragile hope.
Ben was just 14 months old when he vanished without a trace on the Greek island of Kos in July 1991. Today, almost 35 years later, his mother Kerry Needham has revealed that police are preparing to DNA test a man who believes he could be her missing son.

Speaking this week from her home in Antalya, Turkey, Kerry, 53, said an unexpected email had arrived just hours earlier — from a woman convinced her boyfriend’s past holds troubling gaps that could link him to Ben, who would have turned 36 last October.

“I keep a very open mind,” Kerry explained. “I didn’t jump for joy. I’ve got no photo, very little information — just that there are a lot of coincidences and things that don’t add up.”
Kerry has passed the correspondence to South Yorkshire Police, who have led the British side of the investigation since Ben disappeared on July 24, 1991. Officers have confirmed enquiries are ongoing and that the family is being kept informed.

At the time of Ben’s disappearance, Kerry — just 19 years old — had moved to Kos with her son to start a new life with her parents, Eddie and Christine, who were renovating a farmhouse on the island. On the day he vanished, Ben had been left in their care while Kerry worked at a nearby hotel.
The toddler had been playing in and out of the farmhouse, but by mid-afternoon, he was gone.

At first, the family believed Ben may have wandered off and been taken in by someone nearby — perhaps given water in the intense heat and later handed to authorities. For hours, no one suspected the unthinkable.
“We never thought for one minute someone had abducted him,” Kerry said. “We didn’t even understand child trafficking back then.”
Only when no hospital, police station or neighbour had seen Ben did a darker possibility begin to surface.
Over time, Kerry became convinced her son may have been targeted by organised trafficking gangs operating in Greece at the time — illegally selling children for adoption abroad. She recalled a Greek man telling her father that blonde-haired, blue-eyed children like Ben were particularly valuable.
“It sounded impossible,” she said. “But that’s when we started looking down those lines.”

Although Greek police later focused on a theory that Ben was killed in a tragic accident involving a digger near the farmhouse, multiple excavations over several years failed to uncover any human remains — despite thousands of tonnes of soil being removed.
“If there had been an accident, there would have been something,” Kerry insisted. “A fragment. Blood. Anything. They found nothing.”
She has long rejected claims that digger driver Konstantinos ‘Dino’ Barkas accidentally killed Ben and covered it up, calling the theory illogical and unsupported by evidence.

“If I truly believed Ben had died, I would stop,” she said quietly. “I wouldn’t put myself through this pain if I didn’t believe he could still be alive. That’s a mother’s instinct.”
Over the years, Kerry has followed countless leads — some hopeful, others harrowing. She has even been harassed by individuals convinced they were Ben, including one man who tested negative for DNA but continued to pursue contact for two years.
Still, she refuses to give up.

Now living a quieter life in Turkey, Kerry says the calmer environment helps her stay focused as she continues campaigning, researching trafficking networks, and pressing for access to full case files held by Greek authorities.
“I believe there are still unanswered questions,” she said. “And somewhere, someone knows the truth.”

South Yorkshire Police confirmed this week:
“We recently received a report of a woman who believes her partner to be missing person Ben Needham. Enquiries are ongoing, and Ben’s family are aware.”
After 35 years of heartbreak, false dawns and unanswered questions, the case remains painfully open — with one new DNA test offering both hope and fear in equal measure.
Source: Adapted from reporting by https://www.dailymail.co.uk/




