latest e-fit of a possible kidnapper.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
A “possible kidnapper”,? This must be only in the sense that anyone spotted in Praia da Luz who wasn’t an English holiday-maker somehow fits this role? (Set aside such niceties as how you define kidnapping. Doesn’t that mean capturing someone for ransom?) There is still no evidence of a kidnap.<\/p>\n
No matter how many self-serving detectives earn their fees by keeping these unproven theories on the front pages of the tabloids, there is NO EVIDENCE that Madeleine was kidnapped or abducted. There appears to be no convincing evidence of what happened.<\/p>\n
Hence, I favour an alien abduction theory. If the press or the McCann machine will pay me, I will willingly go into space and search for the alien abductors. The truth is surely out there.<\/p>\n
The Mail on Sunday article suggests that the correct British holiday-maker response to seeing any unkempt Portuguese person speaking is to panic.<\/p>\n
Moments later a woman raced out of a nearby villa, shouting and calling to the children, and then scooped them up and took them away from the man.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Harsh as this may sound, Mail readers – if you are frightened of anyone who’s not English, take your vacations in the West Country or the Lake District. Then, you can run to the local police if you accidentally spot anyone who looks vaguely North African….<\/p>\n
Just to see how far the hysteria has spread:<\/p>\n
Meanwhile a potential sighting of Madeleine in Chile with a man who looked like the Mrs Cooper sketch was ruled out by police.
\nDetectives were called to the Gabriel Mistral museum in Vicuna after a man spotted a girl who resembled Madeleine, but the girl was revealed to be American Haylee Dreyer, six, who was on holiday in Vicuna with her Chilean grandparents.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Urgent advice to anyone who looks a bit Iberian or Moroccan <\/strong><\/p>\nNever go to a tourist spot with any young blonde female relatives.<\/p>\n