front page Cannabis News Europe Portuguese judge to rule on British 'binge drink' parents
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Portuguese judge to rule on British 'binge drink' parents |
As sure a case of "double standards" as you will ever see, is this story which relates to a British couple who took their three children on holiday to Portugal. According to local sources, on the first night of the family vacation, mum and dad got so inebriated on cheap Portuguese booze they were both hospitalised for emergency treatment, and their three children were taken into temporary care. Clearly the British "Binge-Drinking" mentality this government nurtures had travelled with the family to Portugal. Portugal you may remember, recently announced to the world, that it would not be prosecuting British football supporters who were in Portugal to watch England play, and who were caught with cannabis. They clearly think the blame for football related violence lays squarely at the feet of alcohol, as was proven a few years ago at the dual hosted Euro-Championships which were shared between Holland (cannabis OK, no trouble) and Belgium, (no cannabis, lots of beer & lots of trouble). If a similar situation had occured as a result of cannabis use, chances are these parents would not have seen their children for a long time, as they would have most certainly faced criminal charges. As it is they were drinkers, which seems to make everything OK. | A Portuguese prosecutor and judge are today considering whether to bring charges against the British couple accused of abandoning their three young children following a drinking session.
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| Eamon and Antoinette McGuckin collapsed unconscious and were taken to hospital for emergency treatment on the first night of their holiday, while their children, aged 1 to 6, were taken into temporary care by the authorities on the Algarve.  The Aparthotel Mourabel in Vilamoura, Portugal, where three British children taken into care after their parents passed out from drink
The legal team at Faro family court are reviewing evidence in the case to decide whether charges can be brought. The couple, from Maghera, Co Londonderry, could be called to court this afternoon to face charges of abandonment, negligence and drinking to excess in front of a child. The first two charges carry possible prison sentences.
| | Prosecution sources suggest however that the McGuckins could be let off with a formal warning, and the evidence handed over to the British authorities to decide what action to take.
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| Mr McGuckin's father, Tony, and his mother, arrived at the Hotel Mourabel in the resort of Villamoura this morning, and were closeted in the hotel room with the couple and their three children.
| It is understood that the family will seek to return home as soon as possible if the court decides not to prosecute. Mr McGuckin, 34, who was a manager at Ulster Bank and now works for a mortgage company in Londonderry, is alleged to have collapsed on a sofa in the reception area of the three-star Mourabel Hotel in the Vilamoura golf resort on Friday night. His 32-year-old wife is said to have staggered into the bar with her children before passing out.
Emergency services could not wake the parents so they were taken to hospital for treatment while their three children were taken to a local refuge.
A spokesman for the GNR police in Vilamoura said: “The parents had been drunk since 3pm. Staff called us at 10pm as the children were crying and they could not revive the parents, who were both out cold.
“We arrived to assess the situation and called the INEM [Portugal’s national medical emergency service] as the parents were unconscious, and they were taken to hospital.”
The manager of the Mourabel said that the family arrived on Friday afternoon. They are believed to have visited a local pub where pints of lager costs €1 (78p) before going for dinner at 8pm.
“They arrived back about 10pm and they entered the door in reception and the man, he tried to sit down on the sofa and fell through it,” the manager said yesterday. “He fell asleep immediately – he passed out. We tried to wake him but it was impossible.
“The lady, she tried to go with the children to the apartment. She was struggling with the pushchair, swaying around from side to side.”
He added: “We put her and the children inside the bar. She was sitting on a chair and she fell asleep and never woke up. We tried to wake her, we tried to put some water on her face and head to wake her but she was very, very bad. She started to be sick every minute. We decided to call the emergency services.
“The eldest [child] was talking to us and answering questions, but sometimes you could see the tears falling down his face as he cried. He could understand that something was very wrong.”
Mr and Mrs McGuckin arrived back at the hotel at about 7am on Saturday in search of their children. “They had run away from hospital and pulled the intravenous drips from their arms,” the manager said. “The mother and father were crying and both were very, very embarrassed and shocked.”
Dr Luis Villas-Boas, director of the Refúgio Aboim Ascensão children’s home in Faro, said that Mr McGuckin had tears in his eyes when the couple came to collect the children on Saturday morning but were silent when he admonished them.
A barman at the Mourabel Hotel said: “It was a very hot day and I don’t think they meant to drink that much but when they tried to stop I think they just couldn’t. They seemed very nice people. It is a great shame this happened.”
Mr McGuckin refused to comment.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk |
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