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A GIRL of seven at the centre of a custody battle was coached by her mum to make fake claims that her father was a paedophile.

Former jockey Victoria Haigh, 41, also launched a public campaign against her wholly innocent ex-partner David Tune, a senior High Court judge said yesterday.

After a series of private hearings, Sir Nicholas Wall decided to make his judgment public yesterday because “scandalous allegations” were put in the public domain “via email and the internet”.

Sir Nicholas said two judges at previous High Court hearings both found that Mr Tune, 41, was not a paedophile and had not sexually abused his daughter.

He added: “The first judge found that allegations of sexual abuse made against the father of a young child were not just untrue but manufactured by the child’s mother, who then caused her daughter to repeat them.

“Because the mother was wholly incapable of fostering a relationship between her daughter and the child’s father, refused to accept the judge’s findings and continued to assert that the father was a paedophile, a second judge found that her mother had caused the child significant harm.” The girl now lived with her father, of Doncaster, South Yorks, and was subject to a care plan organised by the local council, the court heard.

The judge ruled Ms Haigh, Mr Tune and the local authority could be identified. But he said the child – referred to in court as X – should not be named. He said: “Allegations of sexual abuse were first made by the mother and not by X. These were false and the mother knew them to be false. X was coached by the mother to make allegations of sexual abuse against the father.

“These proceedings have had a serious effect on the life of the father and have threatened the stability of the child.

“Her mother’s actions are wholly contrary to her interests.

“The father is entitled to tell the world, and the world is entitled to know, that he is not a paedophile, that he has not sexually abused his daughter and that the allegations made against him are false.”

The court heard how Ms Haigh never had a “scintilla of evidence” against her ex but enlisted the help of newspapers and MPs.

Ms Haigh, who is now a racehorse trainer, received support from Daily Telegraph columnist Christopher Booker, and Labour MP John Hemming even brought up the case in Parliament.

She was described as a “victim of a serious injustice” and claimed she had to flee to Ireland to give birth to her second child.

Meanwhile, the online smears against Mr Tune continued.

By repeating the “untruth”, Sir Nicholas went on, she “attacked the good faith of all the professionals who had had any contact with the case”.

He ordered that Ms Haigh could not make any application in ­relation to her daughter without his permission for two years.