| Children put in care after drunk holiday couple collapse Sam Jones A British couple who allegedly got so drunk while on holiday in Portugal that their three children had to be taken into temporary care are "very unlikely" to face neglect charges, a Portuguese judicial source said yesterday. Hotel staff in the Algarve resort of Vilamoura called police after Eamon McGuckin, 34, and his wife Antoinette, 32, from Maghera, Northern Ireland, collapsed on Friday night. The hotel barman said the couple had been drinking at a nearby bar which offered pints of lager for €1 (78p) before taking their children - aged one, two and six - out for dinner at about 8pm. When the family returned to Aparthotel Mourabel a couple of hours later, Mr McGuckin passed out on a sofa in reception. According to the hotel's manager, Mrs McGuckin then struggled to get the children back to their flat before she too passed out.
After staff called the police, the couple were taken to a health centre in nearby Loule while their children were temporarily taken into care at the Refugio Aboim Ascensao children's home in Faro. Mr and Mrs McGuckin are thought to have discharged themselves from the clinic the next morning and returned to the hotel at about 7am unaware of what had happened. Dr Luis Villas-Boas, director of the home where the children were taken, said that when Mr and Mrs McGuckin arrived to collect the youngsters just before midday they looked very upset and asked whether the media knew about what had happened. The incident coincided with the first anniversary of the disappearance of Madeleine McCann from the resort of Praia da Luz, 45 miles from Vilamoura. Villas-Boas, who described the matter as "very, very shocking", said: "It is the first time it has happened in my 22 years working at this home. It's normal for a couple for one to drink while the other doesn't drink. The problem here is they were both passed out." He added: "If they were not in an aparthotel and were staying by themselves in an apartment, I do not want to speculate on what could have happened to children of six, two and one whose parents were passed out."
|
|||||