A £50,000 reward for information that leads to missing Dunfermline man Corrie McKeague being found has been reinstated.

The reward that was first offered anonymously back in December 2016 but was withdrawn in February because it had not lead to any new information.

However, the reward has been offered again by Suffolk businessman Colin Davey.

Corrie's mother Nicola Urquhart said she still believed someone knew what had happened to him and hoped the "life-changing" sum would help to find her son.

The 23-year-old, a former St Columbas pupil, disappeared after a night out in Bury St Edmunds, close to where he was based at RAF Honington.

Police fear Corrie was crushed in a bin lorry and taken to a rubbish tip after falling asleep.

His family have been left at a stuck end since detectives said they had come to the end of a 20 week search at the landfill site in Milton, Cambridge, with no trace of Corrie.

Writing to the 128,000 members of 'Find Corrie', Nicola, a police officer, said: "From the first time I spoke publicly about Corrie disappearing I have said someone knows - I still truly believe that.

"Suffolk police have carried out an enormous amount of work to try to find Corrie.

"However, they can only continue to do this if they have lines of enquiry and information coming into them.

"I would beg that anyone that has information, no matter how insignificant they feel it may be, if you have not already spoken to Suffolk Police, or if you tried to call but were not called back, or feel you were not taken seriously at the time, please call.

"It is never ever too late to do the right thing, for your own soul and conscience please come forward, help us to find Corrie, I need my boy home."

Ms Urquhart said that the search at the landfill was currently paused for an external independent review to be carried out.

Recommendations can be made and Corrie's family can request it, but there's no guarantee that any further searches will be carried out.

Only circumstantial evidence shows that Corrie may be in the landfill as his mobile phone signal traced the route of the bin lorry from Bury St Edmunds to Milton, but it has been the most positive line of enquiry so far.