“It is a victory for justice, first of all, and a victory
for the Portuguese State and of the Portuguese justice system, which worked
very well”, the former PJ inspector told Lusa, also giving “congratulations to
all those who defend freedom of opinion and expression”.
At issue in the Strasbourg-based court was the complaint
against Portuguese justice for having acquitted Gonçalo Amaral of compensating
the parents of the British girl - who disappeared in Lagos, in May 2007 - after
allegations made by the former PJ inspector in a book, in a documentary and in
an interview with the newspaper Correio da Manhã.
Regarding the process of Madeleine McCann's disappearance,
Gonçalo Amaral said that the process is still open.
“It is a gross mistake to be waiting for decisions from the
Germans and the English for us [Portuguese police] to do anything”, said the
former inspector of the Judiciary, reiterating the criticisms made earlier in
his latest book “Maddie – Basta de Mentiras!” (Contraponto Editores, 2021),
especially with regard to German research.
German suspect claims
Gonçalo Amaral recalled that he had access to the German
investigation process, analysed it and defended that the German suspect
[Christian Bruckner] who was arrested in Germany and was made a suspect by the
Portuguese Public Ministry in the disappearance of Madeleine McCann “has not
committed any crime of rape in Portugal”, contrary to what the German
authorities claim, who have already sentenced the accused to seven years in
prison.
According to Gonçalo Amaral, “it is documented” that there
was no crime of rape by Bruckner of a foreign citizen in the Algarve, noting
that the German authorities sent requests for international collaboration
“based on lies” and that the Portuguese authorities “never questioned” these
allegations, when there is a medical report from the Hospital de Portimão
ensuring that the violation did not occur.