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No closure: Gerry and Kate McCann |
A little knowledge is a dangerous thing, as Kate and Gerry McCann
have discovered to their cost.
It only takes five minutes on the internet to uncover a web of
rumour, half truth and innuendo which would convince even the couple's
most fervent supporters that they are hiding something about the
disappearance of their daughter Madeleine in Portugal in May 2007, or,
worse, that they actually killed her, either by accident or design, and
then concocted the story of her abduction from a holiday complex in the
Algarve to cover their tracks.
Which version one chooses to believe is a matter of personal
taste. When it comes to outlandish conspiracy theories, there really is
one for everyone in the internet's global audience of nutters, giving
ever greater credence to the old line about a lie getting round the
world before the truth gets out of bed. But if you're on the receiving
end of it, like the McCanns and their friends, you certainly don't
expect the police to add fuel to the fire.
Say what you like about the gardai, but it's impossible to
imagine a senior Irish police officer behaving like Goncalo Amaral, the
former investigating officer in Portimao, who was so stung by criticism
he received for his handling of this case that he marked his own
dismissal from the investigation by writing a book alleging that
Madeleine died
accidentally in the family apartment on the night of May 3, 2007;
that Gerry then disposed of his daughter's body on the beach; and that
the holiday party all colluded in a cover-up to prevent possible charges
being laid against them for child neglect.
The controversy surrounding Amaral's book, Maddie: The Truth of
the Lie, finally reached the courts last week, as the author sought to
overturn a ban on its publication, previously won by the McCanns. This
could well be the closest the McCanns' Portuguese tormentors ever get to
their wish of putting the couple on trial.
"They are trying to judge in a civil court what they could not
judge in a criminal court," the couple's lawyer points out.
The case has now been adjourned until next month, when two more
witnesses, currently unavailable, will give evidence; but even if the
former police officer loses this one, it won't stop there. He insists
this is about the right of free speech under the Portuguese
constitution, and has pledged to go all the way to the European Court of
Human Rights to defend his freedom to publish his allegations.
And here's hoping he ultimately wins. Goncalo Amaral might be a
disgrace to the name of detective, whose book, far from being the
fearless expose which it boastfully purports to be, is a shoddy cut and
paste job that is shamelessly selective in its use of evidence,
cynically exaggerates the significance of DNA traces found in the
McCanns' apartment and hire car, makes leaps of logic which would
embarrass Inspector Clouseau, never mind a supposedly senior policeman,
pads out its thesis with silly cod-historical digressions on the
"turbulent" ancient history between England and the Algarve, and the
proud noble independent spirit of the Portuguese people; and which
ultimately resorts to ludicrously overblown paranoia about political
interference in the case (though naturally Amaral struggles to explain
why so many powerful people, up to and including the British prime
minister, would go to such extraordinary lengths to protect a bunch of
obscure doctors on holiday from being held to account for neglecting
their children).
But even bad detectives and worse true crime writers should be
free to speak about their experiences and conclusions in a case whose
ongoing lack of resolution is clearly not in the public interest. Not
least when all the material contained in The Truth of the Lie comes from
the official police files, which, since the investigation was archived,
have largely been in the public domain anyway. What contrary right are
the McCanns asserting here, after all? The book has already sold 200,000
copies in Portugal, been translated into six other languages including
Spanish, Italian, Swedish and German, and is freely available in English
versions over the internet. Ten seconds on Google and it's yours to
read, whatever the courts decide.
The documentary which Amaral helped make for Portuguese TV can
also be seen, subtitled, on YouTube, while numerous websites continue to
rake over the same small disputed scraps of evidence which he uses in
his book to crudely smear the McCanns. Indeed, he will soon be visiting
Britain to give a talk at the invitation of a virulently anti-Kate and
Gerry group known as the Madeleine Foundation. All of which sounds like
healthy free speech to me. The McCanns' pain shouldn't give them carte
blanche to silence those who say things they don't want to hear.
Unfortunately, this is what they have done from the start. These
are people who issue solicitors' letters the way other couples send out
wedding invitations. There's even a website now devoted to people who
claim to have been "Gagged By (The) McCanns", with the tagline: "Has
Team McCann tried to silence you?" Free speech isn't so free when you're
working on a shoestring and your opponents have multi-million pound
funds at their disposal.
The McCanns insist they act this way only because they don't want
a sense of defeatism about Madeleine's fate to dilute the continuing
effort to find their daughter. That's understandable, though Kate
McCann's claim last week that the proceedings have "shown again there is
no evidence that Madeleine came to any harm" are bewildering, to say the
least. Sniffer dogs who had been trained to detect the presence of
cadavers and blood both reacted strongly in the couple's holiday
apartment. Something bad happened there, even if there is not a scrap of
credible physical evidence that it had anything to do with them. It
seems like another example of a couple who have never exactly come
across as warm or likeable in the public imagination doing themselves no
favours, especially when so many questions remain to be answered about
that awful night and the following weeks.
They can't have it both ways, demanding that interest in the
disappearance of Madeleine remains high while also continually asserting
their right to control the tenor and nature of that interest.
Goncalo Amaral's claims need to be rebutted, not censored. That's
the real tragedy. It's coming up to the third anniversary of this little
girl's disappearance, and the effort to find out what happened to her
has become swamped in an unseemly battle among people desperate to
protect their own reputations. It could drag on for years.
The McCanns will soon be back in court seeking €1m in libel
damages against Amaral. By the time all this is concluded, Madeleine
McCann might as well be known as, "Madeleine Who?" for all the progress
which will have been made to bring closure to the saga.
Sunday Independent |