The Press Conference

Dirk-Suche 30 Jahre 009

On 10 March 2009 it has been thirty years since my son, Dirk, has been missing.

The day before that "anniversary" I didn't feel too well. I remembered that my child had been with us exactly 30 years ago. The next day he disappeared - till today.

That is a very bittersweet feeling.

So on 10 March (last week) I went to Berlin, where a press conference had been planned in the Dirk-Schiller-Room at the Wall Museum at Checkpoint Charlie. The director of the Wall Museum, my dear friend Alexandra Hildebrandt, held a speech that made herself and me cry. Sie urged that "the criminals who abducted Dirk MUST be caught!"

She is right, and that is what we are fighting for. And not only us - Stern TV plans to stay on top of the matter, too.

On the 30th Anniversary of my son's disappearance I got new energy because I could sense that my child's fate matters to other people as well. A Berlin radio station was among the guests, and a representative of the German Press Agency dpa. Also some of our victums and others who want to help find Dirk had come and stood by my side.

The journalist of the dpa also showed his commitment and wrote an article that, as I've been informed since the 10th, was published in numerous German papers, including the tabloid BILD.

Flyers with Dirk's computer composite in German and in English have been laid out inside the Wall Museum.

And we will now follow up on another lead - all male adoption cases in East Germany and Russia during the years after Dirk's disappearance are to be checked into ...

One hot trace that came up after the Stern-TV show several weeks ago unfortunately turned out to be nothing but hot air. A foreign woman excitedly called the TV Channel Stern TV, reporting that her boyfriend could be Dirk. His name is supposed to be Dirk as well (we assume that Dirk could keep his first name, since he would otherwise have asked some uncomfortable questions), he is supposed to be Dirk's age, from former East Germany and allegedly has been looking for his biological parents for years. But the caller also said that "her" Dirk would soon travel to Austria and then he could no longer submit any DNA sample, which was strange. She insisted on personally organizing a DNA test of samples from "Dirk" and myself - which was a rather dubious offer according to the hosts of Stern TV.

Then the woman called me several times and became unpleasant. She urged me to send her a saliva sample for the DNA test and even became rude when I said that it won't work that way.

As it turned out, the two DNA samples don't match. That was not Dirk. That was either an overly eager spectator of the TV show - or another attempt to discourage me in my search for Dirk. So far I have paid for the two DNA tests myself because obviously I had to find out if they would match.

Who knows what was behind that story. And who.