Another eventful week online has seen
the parents of Madeleine McCann shut
down the Twitter account set up to find
their daughter due to an “avalanche of
offensive commentaries” from supporters
of the family of Ben Needham - the
toddler who went missing from the Greek
island of Kos in 1991.
The toxic mail was prompted by the
findmadeleine feed’s “blocking” of an
account supporting the hunt for Ben
after Ben’s mother publicly questioned
the £10.1 million (€13.6 million) of
taxpayer’s money ploughed into the
ongoing police hunt for Madeleine, when
only €800,000 has been spent over many
more years looking for her son.
But as the wrangle plays out in British
and Portuguese press, another glitch has
come to the surface.
Internet meddlers have “blocked” the
gofundme page raising money to help
beleaguered former detective Gonçalo
Amaral fight the civil case taken out
against him by the McCanns.
Whereas the page could previously be
found by Google in a simple internet
search, this week it suddenly became
untraceable.
Bizarrely, search engine Bing still
leads users to it - which has led to the
online question: “Has Google prevented
the search for Gonçalo Amaral Go Fund Me
page… and if so why?”
The truth is that the page still exists
and has now raised over €68,000.
In the British press this week, Jerry
Lawton of the Daily Star stated that “a
new libel case” begins tomorrow in
Lisbon that could see appeal judges
“strip the couple of £357,000 (just
under €500,000), which they “hope to
use” to find Madeleine.
A legal source has confirmed that the
appeal is in the process of being
considered but there is no indication
for the time being when judges will
reach a decision.
Nonetheless, what the Gofundme appeal
online has ensured, said the source, is
that Gonçalo Amaral is in a position to
continue his legal fight, which he has
repeatedly said centres on his own right
to freedom of expression. |