Image copyright PA Image caption Madeleine went missing in the Portuguese holiday resort of Praia da Luz in 2007, aged three

A Portuguese court has awarded the parents of missing Madeleine McCann damages of £358,000 after a libel case.

Kate and Gerry McCann sued ex-police chief Goncalo Amaral, who led the search for their daughter, following claims he made about them in his book.

Madeleine went missing while on holiday in May 2007 and Mr Amaral had suggested the couple had faked her abduction.

The McCanns said they were "delighted" with the ruling but wanted to emphasise the case had never been about money.

In a statement issued by their spokesman Clarence Mitchell, they said: "It was entirely focused on the effect of the libels on our other children and the damage that was done to the search for Madeleine."

The former police officer can appeal against the ruling.

'Anxious and fearful'

In The Truth Of The Lie, Mr Amaral alleged Madeleine had died in the family's holiday apartment in Praia de Luz in the Algarve, and that her parents had simulated her abduction and hidden her body.

The McCanns, from Rothley in Leicestershire, said the claims exacerbated their anguish and discouraged people from coming forward with information after Madeleine disappeared.

Madeleine went missing in the Portuguese holiday resort of Praia da Luz, aged three.

Image copyright AP Image caption Kate and Gerry McCann pictured at the libel trial in Lisbon last year

Mr Amaral, who initially headed the inquiry into Madeleine's disappearance, was taken off the case in October 2007.

His book, published in 2008, has been a bestseller in Portugal.

The McCanns were originally seeking 1.25m euros (almost £900,000) in damages from Mr Amaral, his publisher and a company that produced a documentary based on his book.

In a written verdict, a court in the Portugeuse capital Lisbon ruled Mr Amaral should pay Mr and Mrs McCann 250,000 euros each in damages, plus interest in excess of 100,000 euros (£71,500).

The court also barred Mr Amaral and his publisher from selling the book or issuing further editions. It also barred the producer of the film from selling the rights to broadcast or distribute it.

During the trial, Mrs McCann told the court that when she had first found out about the allegations she was "quite desperate because of the injustice I felt towards my daughter and our family as a whole".

"It was very painful to read and I also felt anxious and fearful because of the damage I felt it was doing here in Portugal," she said.

Image copyright PA Image caption The McCanns sued Mr Amaral following claims he made in his 2008 book, The Truth Of The Lie

Portuguese authorities dropped their investigation into Madeleine's disappearance in 2008, but Scotland Yard started a review in May 2011, after Prime Minister David Cameron responded to a plea from the McCanns.

In 2013, the Met Police opened a formal investigation, known as Operation Grange, which remains ongoing.

In June 2014 police officers used dogs to search several sites in the Praia de Luz resort, as well as "ground penetrating radar" to look for disturbed earth, but their searches did not yield any results.

In their statement, the McCanns said: "A lot has changed in the six years since we launched the action and we are pleased that there is still an active investigation in both Portugal and the UK.

"We would like to remind people that there is still an innocent little girl who is missing and that those responsible for her abduction remain at large."