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		The 
		
		
		
		McCanns complained last 
		weekend of “injustices that we continue to be subjected to.” This was 
		widely reported in the UK and Portuguese press and referred to a 
		Wikileaks disclosure that had “led to the repetition of many unfounded 
		allegations and smears both in the UK and in 
		Portugal in 
		particular.” 
		
		A modest group of 
		people in Portugal 
		also have been subjected to unfounded allegations, injustices and smears 
		in connection with the 
		
		Madeleine 
		McCann
		investigation, but they have had no channel for complaint so their side 
		of the story has gone totally unreported - until now. 
		
		
		
		Ivone Albino, 
		a Portuguese woman who makes her living as a part-time house cleaner, 
		was shattered to learn in April this year that newspapers in the UK were 
		running sensational stories directly linking her with the alleged 
		abduction of Madeleine McCann 
		three years earlier. She was the latest victim in a tidal wave of 
		misinformation and 
		
		false “sightings”
		that began soon after Madeleine's 
		disappearance from a holiday 
		
		apartment in the village of
		
		
		Praia da Luz in May 2007. 
		  
		Mrs Albino's name was 
		buried in a “secret” 2,000-page dossier containing information about 
		Madeleine “sightings” that had been brought to the attention of the 
		Portuguese criminal investigation police, the Policia Judiciaria. The 
		existence of the dossier emerged after it was referred to by a police 
		witness during a Lisbon  
		
		court hearing considering the ban on a
		
		
		
		book by the former lead detective in the Madeleine case,
		
		
		Goncalo 
		Amaral. 
		  
		When the judge in the 
		hearing ordered the dossier's release, it was eagerly seized upon by 
		Kate and Gerry McCann, 
		their advisers and the British 
		press. It was brandished as yet more evidence of the “incompetence” of 
		the Portuguese police in their search for Madeleine. 
		  
		By then, Britain's 
		mainstream media seemed to have accepted the 
		McCanns' insistence from the very start that Madeleine 
		had been abducted and that she might still be alive. They ignored or 
		viewed with hostility the alternative theory, the one most prevalent in
		Portugal and 
		the main thrust of Goncalo Amaral's book, namely that Madeleine had died 
		in the apartment and that her parents were somehow involved. 
		  
		Referring to the 
		Policia Judicaria dossier and in line with the abduction theory, 
		British (though not 
		Portuguese) newspapers named Mrs Albino as one of two “gypsy women” seen 
		by a British 
		holidaymaker dragging Madeleine along an Algarve street in September 
		2008. The little girl was wearing a “black wig” but the holidaymaker was 
		“100 per cent sure” it was Madeleine. The same reports revealed that a 
		rag doll had been found at a house repeatedly visited by Mrs Albino. 
		According to the reports, Madeleine “may have been held prisoner” at the 
		house. 
		  
		A source close to 
		Madeleine's parents was quoted as saying: “This is one of the strongest 
		leads there's been in the hunt for 
		Maddie.”  
		  
		It wasn't. The “lead” 
		merely gave rise to yet more sensational nonsense in the 
		British press, causing 
		deep humiliation and distress to Mrs Albino and two other entirely 
		innocent people with no connection whatsoever to the disappearance of 
		Madeleine McCann. 
		  
		This whole silly 
		episode began in September 2008, eighteen months after Madeleine's 
		disappearance. A 56-year-old retired home care worker from Widnes in 
		Cheshire, England, phoned the 'Find Madeleine' hotline that had been set 
		up by the parents of the missing child. She reported seeing two women 
		with Madeleine in the beach-side village of Carvoeiro, 30 miles east of 
		Praia da Luz. 
		  
		“This was a young 
		girl, in the middle of the two women and holding the hand of each. Her 
		eyes were wide open and I was attracted to the large irises,” said the 
		Carvoeiro witness. 
		  
		“The child was 
		wearing what was clearly a black wig. It was short, cut in a bob style 
		and very thick. The wig was shiny and unnatural looking and out of 
		keeping with her very pale complexion and fair eyebrows. I would say she 
		was about 3ft 1in tall and about five years of age. She was very thin 
		and I would describe her as malnourished. Her cheeks looked gaunt. I 
		think she had a bump on her nose. I am convinced the little girl I saw 
		that morning was Madeleine. I have been asked how certain I am. I will 
		say I am 100 per cent sure.” 
		  
		The Carvoeiro witness 
		described the first of the two women as “obese, size 30, in her mid to 
		late 40s, with “dirty and unkempt” red hair. The other woman was around 
		60, with unwashed brown hair, and even fatter. The witness claimed that 
		when the women realised she was looking at them, they hid the little 
		girl's face. She recognised Mrs Albino as the red-haired woman with 
		Madeleine in Carvoeiro. The second woman was never identified. 
		  
		Another unrelated
		British 
		witness, from Salisbury in Wiltshire, said she saw a woman resembling 
		Mrs Albino outside the McCanns´ 
		apartment the day Madeleine disappeared. In both cases the 
		identifications were made from photographs. A much earlier report of a 
		woman passing a child wrapped in a blanket over a fence to a man next to 
		two parked vehicles in Silves two days after Madeleine's disappearance 
		added spice to these later reports. 
		  
		The “sightings” 
		prompted private investigators employed by Madeleine's parents to zero 
		in on Mrs Albino and follow her to “an isolated farmhouse” in an orange 
		grove near the town of Silves where she lives. In a surveillance 
		operation, private investigators saw her making several visits to the 
		house and meeting there with a couple called 
		
		Maria Alice 
		Silveira and Jorge Martins. The couple's movements were 
		deemed to be “suspicious” by a top detective employed by the 
		McCanns. 
		  
		Suspicions heightened 
		when investigators found and photographed a child's rag doll on the seat 
		of a Citroen Berlingo van parked at the house. “Was this the rag doll 
		given to Maddie 
		by her captors?” wondered The Sun in a headline spread over half a page. 
		The question was promptly answered in the first sentence in the story 
		that followed: “This little girl's rag doll could have been given to 
		Madeleine McCann 
		by those who snatched her, investigators believe.” 
		  
		The investigators, 
		posing as potential buyers of the property, came across a discarded 
		child's drawing.  And they spotted Jorge Martins buying clothes suitable 
		for a child of five, the age Madeleine would then have been. They 
		thought all this strange as neither Mrs Albino, Ms Silveira nor Mr 
		Martins had young children of their own. “But surveillance was 
		eventually wound down and the child was never found.” 
		  
		These observations 
		were passed to Portugal's 
		criminal investigation police, even though the official Portuguese 
		police inquiry into Madeleine's disappearance had been closed.  By then 
		the police had already considered hundreds of bogus or mistaken 
		“sightings” in about 50 countries ranging from neighbouring Spain to 
		Australia and New Zealand. 
		  
		On learning of the 
		Silves surveillance “evidence” through the newly released dossier, two 
		of Britain's biggest-selling and most powerful newspapers carried 
		prominent reports complete with separate photographs of Mrs Albino, Ms 
		Silveira and Mr Martins, Madeleine, and the rag doll. They quoted a 
		source close to Kate and Gerry 
		McCann as saying. 
		“There was credible evidence at the orchard that needed proper 
		investigation by the Portuguese – that never happened.” 
		  
		In fact, the 
		Portuguese police did investigate the “sightings” and the “suspicious 
		behaviour”. They questioned all three people and visited the farmhouse. 
		They soon concluded there was no reason to take their inquiries further. 
		Any reasonably intelligent Portuguese-speaking person who had spent  a 
		few minutes talking with Mrs Albino about the matter would have come to 
		the same conclusion. This did not stop the 
		British press from 
		rushing into print with a load of baloney. 
		  
		The truth that didn't 
		make it into the papers is that Mrs Albino regularly drives through 
		Carvoeiro on the way from Silves to a house she services. She never 
		walks in the village with or without children in tow. “I have never held 
		the hand of any child in Carvoeiro, let alone one with a black wig or 
		resembling Madeleine McCann,”  
		she told me. No villager can be found in Carvoeiro who would dispute 
		that. As for Praia da Luz, Mrs Albino said she had never been there. She 
		admitted somewhat sheepishly that she had only a vague idea of where 
		Praia da Luz was located. 
		  
		Overweight, yes, but 
		no one who had known Mrs Albino over many years could recall her hair 
		ever being dirty, unkempt or red. Indeed she did visit a somewhat 
		neglected house in an orange orchard. It is on the outskirts of Silves' 
		urban area, not “remote” as the newspapers made out. She visits it daily 
		to feed the property's only occupants: her chickens, rabbits and a large 
		guard dog. 
		  
		The property had long 
		been owned by the family of Mrs Albino's cousin, Maria Alice Silveira, 
		who lives elsewhere in Silves. She used to own a dry-cleaning shop in 
		the neighbouring town of Lagoa. Her partner ,Jorge, whom she has since 
		married, is a primary school teacher. They drive over to the house in 
		their Citroen Berlingo van from time to time to tend the orchard and 
		collect fruit. 
		  
		Mr Martins said he 
		found the doll in a roadway, though it was such a minor event that he 
		could not remember exactly where or when. The doll was in good condition 
		so, without much thought he picked it and put it in the van. He agreed 
		that there had been a discarded child's drawing at the house and, yes, 
		he had bought clothes for a young child. Maria Alice had a grandchild of 
		about Madeleine's age. 
		  
		Although they did not 
		read English, Jorge, Maria Alice and Ivone felt shocked and humiliated 
		when told of the reports and shown their photographs in national 
		British newspapers. 
		Their shock soon turned to anger and anxiety about possible 
		repercussions. 
		  
		With the start of 
		another summer holiday season in the Algarve, Ivone was concerned that
		British 
		parents with young families staying in the holiday villas she cleans 
		might view her with suspicion, jeopardising her job. 
		  
		Maria Alice said she 
		had lost some British 
		customers at her dry-cleaning business because of the press pointing the 
		finger unjustly. Jorge remained deeply disturbed by what he called “the 
		stupidity” of the British 
		reports that falsely insinuated wrong-doing. 
		  
		All three considered 
		suing to clear their names. But they soon came to realise they did not 
		have either the capital or the connections to take the sort of legal 
		action that resulted in the 
		British press paying out £500,000 in damages to the
		McCanns, £550,000 to Robert Murat and £375,000 to the 
		so-called Tapas 7. Actually, this humble group didn't want compensation 
		money so much as an apology. |