Western Morning News

Madeleine’s parents are sad to lose legal battle

- PRESS ASSOCIATIO­N REPORTERS

THE parents of Madeleine McCann are “naturally disappoint­ed” at losing their legal battle over comments made by a retired Portuguese detective, but said they only took action to protect the search for their daughter.

Lawyers for Kate and Gerry McCann had argued that Portuguese authoritie­s had breached their right to respect for a private and family life in the way the courts there dealt with their libel claims against Gonçalo Amaral.

Mr Amaral claimed in a book, television documentar­y and newspaper interview that the McCanns were involved in their daughter Madeleine’s disappeara­nce.

In a judgment published yesterday, the European Court of Human Rights rejected the couple’s arguments, finding that there was extensive publicity around the claims against them before Mr Amaral published his book in July 2008.

The McCanns said in a statement issued through their lawyers: “We are naturally disappoint­ed with decision of the European Court of Human Rights announced today. However, much has changed since we started legal proceeding­s 13 years ago against Mr Amaral, his publisher and broadcaste­r.

“We took action for one and only one reason: Mr Amaral’s unfounded claims were having a detrimenta­l impact on the search for Madeleine. If the public believed that we were involved in her disappeara­nce, then people would not be alert for possible clues and may not report relevant informatio­n to the relevant law enforcemen­t agencies.

“The focus is now rightly on the search for Madeleine and her abductor(s). We are grateful for the ongoing work by the British, German and Portuguese police. We hope that, with the help of the public, hard work and diligence we can eventually find those responsibl­e for Madeleine’s disappeara­nce and bring them to justice.”

Three-year-old Madeleine vanished during a family holiday to the resort of Praia da Luz, Portugal, on May 3 2007.

Earlier this year, German investigat­ors said they had new evidence against prime suspect in the case and convicted sex offender Christian Brückner, and in April he was officially declared a suspect by Portuguese officials as a 15-year legal deadline approached.

The ECHR found that Mr Amaral’s claims had not had a negative effect on the McCann’s “social relations” or their campaign to find their daughter. It said: “While the Court understood that the book’s publicatio­n had undeniably caused anger, anguish and distress to the applicants, it did not appear that the book, or the broadcasti­ng of the documentar­y, had had a serious impact on the applicants’ social relations or on their legitimate and ongoing attempts to find their daughter.

“The Court considered that, even assuming that the applicants’ reputation had been damaged, this was not on account of the argument put forward by the book’s author but rather as a result of the suspicions expressed against them, which had led to their being placed under investigat­ion in the course of the criminal investigat­ion [the prosecutor’s office decided to take no further action in July 2008] and had led to intense media attention.”

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