By Enda Brady, Sky News Correspondent
The family of missing schoolgirl Alice Gross have said "every morning brings new agony" as they made a heartfelt plea for her to return home.
The appeal came as police stage a reconstruction of her final movements, four weeks after she disappeared.
Alice, 14, was seen on CCTV on August 28 walking alongside the Grand Union Canal in west London back towards her home in Hanwell and has not been seen since.
Some 600 officers from eight forces are involved in the searchA statement from Alice's family, released through Scotland Yard, said: "Alice has been missing for four weeks now. We are desperately concerned about her welfare and worry constantly about what may have happened to her.
"We are appealing to Alice. If you are out there, to come home where you belong. We love you and we miss you. We want to see your smile again, we want to hear you sing again, to see you cuddle Peggy, or sit at the piano. We want to be a family again.
"The whole family, all your friends, the community and the police are united in trying to bring you home.
Sightings of Alice on August 28"We are also appealing to anyone out there who knows anything about Alice's disappearance or where she is to come forward now.
"We cannot believe that Alice is not at home with us and every morning brings new agony. We dearly love our daughter and Nina dearly loves her sister.
"Please, please help us."
Murder detectives investigating the disappearance have followed up 729 lines of inquiry and received more than 1,000 calls from the public in response to appeals, but have not yet been able to establish what happened after 4.26pm that day.
It is the biggest search undertaken since the 7/7 attacks of 2005They have searched 30 properties, 25 square kilometres of open land and 5.5km of canals and rivers.
Around 600 officers from eight forces are involved in the investigation, making it the biggest search undertaken by the Metropolitan Police since the 7/7 transport bomb attacks in London in 2005.
Prime suspect, 41-year-old builder Arnis Zalkalns - a convicted murderer who served seven years in a Latvian jail for killing his wife - was spotted on CCTV cycling along the same path as Alice on the day she vanished.
He has not been seen since September 3 and has not accessed his bank account or used his mobile phone.
Officers have been sent to his native Latvia in an effort to trace him.
Scotland Yard hope the reconstruction of Alice's last known movements, which began with her leaving her home at 1pm before walking along Brentford Lock, will help jog people's memory of the afternoon of August 28.
Scotland Yard commander Graham McNulty has admitted his officers would have no power to arrest Zalkalns if he is found in his native Latvia or elsewhere.
He said the force would need to be "charge ready" to apply for a European Arrest Warrant, and has not done so because this would stop officers being able to interview the suspect.
A reward of up to £20,000 is being offered for anyone who has information that leads detectives to find Alice.
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