Eva Aydelman, the initiator and leading figure behind the
Carnival of Luxury staged recently in the Arade Pavillion near Portimão, is angry about
the controversy surrounding the event.
Mrs Aydelman says she has been subjected to malicious
rumour and inaccurate press reports, and that she is “disgusted” by allegations
of previous convictions for fraud committed in the UK .
The “ultimate lifestyle fair” as it was billed, did not
live up to her expectations because of “jealousy, extortion, defamation and lies.
My lawyer and I have proof of it, but it is for the courts and not for the
so-called truth-loving press to decide,” she said.
She quoted the 20th century American writer Robert E.
Howard: “Civilized men are more discourteous than savages because they know
they can be impolite without having their skulls split, as a general thing.”
So annoyed is she by her hostile critics that she intends
submitting a case to the European Court of Human Rights because she does not
feel she could get proper justice in this country.
Asked why she initiated a luxury
event here at a time of financial crisis, Mrs Aydelman, an Israeli citizen born in the former USSR ,
said that on first coming to Portugal
to look for investment property she fell in love with the Algarve .
“I just wanted to add some glitter to the world’s best
kept secret. It was a dream. The beauty of the nature hypnotised me, but now
when I look around all I can see is ugliness – dirt, actual and moral.”
So far she has paid off 90% of the bills arising from the
carnival and is in the process of settling the rest, but she will end up well out
of pocket. “Don’t get me wrong, the financial losses are painful, but the
emotional suffering is the worst.”
Mrs Aydelman declined to say how much she had lost. To do
so would only “provide satisfactions to all of you (the press) and become a new
topic for public discussion.”
Having promised to contribute to charities before the
event, she said that despite her losses she would honour that pledge.
“I still believe that good causes should not suffer
because of people that don’t have the first clue about humility. And if the
press would stop for a minute smearing my name and intentions, they would have
heard the announcement I made (at the Carnival) during Sunday afternoon:
that charities would still get
donations, maybe not as big as we hoped. For this they can thank the
sensational and scandal-hungry press.”
Would she consider staging such an event in the Algarve or elsewhere in Portugal ever
again?
“At this specific moment I would like to make a time
capsule with the message that not only my children, my grandchildren and my
great-grand children should avoid this place more than the plague. But this
is regarding my children or my descendants. In regards to myself,
I don’t really know.”