The birth parents of "Maria" stumble out of a studio in the Bulgarian capital, minutes after their first major TV interview.
Surrounded by bright
lights and state-of-the art technology, Saska Ruseva and her husband
Atanas Rusev are a world away from the tumbledown Roma village where
they live in central Bulgaria.
Back in Nikolaevo, there are no street lights. Their house is made of mud brick and straw.
The couple were a world
away too from Maria, the blond toddler found during a police raid of a
Roma camp in Greece. DNA tests last week showed the Resevs were her
biological parents.
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"She's my child. I'm her
mother. I love her. I gave birth to her. I would tell Maria that I'm
your mother. This is your father," she told CNN. "I will take care of
her. She's mine. You can't change that fact."
The Rusevs are being
investigated by Bulgarian police on suspicion they sold Maria for
illegal adoption. A Greek Roma couple -- Christos Salis and Eleftheria
Dimopoulo -- who were found looking after the girl are in custody
charged with kidnapping.
Both couples deny any
wrongdoing. Ruseva is adamant she left Maria in Greece because she was
too poor to feed her but did not sell her or receive any payment.
"People say I received
400 leva (about $310 dollars) but how could I receive money? They keep
saying that on TV. Do you think I would sell my child for 400 leva?" she
told CNN. "I'd like to build a house. I don't have a proper house or a
proper bed. Nothing. I didn't receive anything. I'm so poor."
Speaking to Ruseva
through a Bulgarian interpreter can be a bit complicated. Ruseva like
most of her Roma neighbors from Nikolaevo only speaks a smattering of
Bulgarian. Her native language is a Turkish dialect mixed with some Roma
and Bulgarian words.
But bit by bit she explained the series of events that ended with Maria being abandoned with a stranger in Greece.
Ruseva said she and her
husband left for Greece in 2009 to look for farm work. She says she left
her eldest daughter Katia, now 20-years-old, to care for the family
while they were away.
Ruseva says she was so thin she did not realize she was even pregnant with Maria.
"I didn't know I was pregnant. I didn't even have a belly," she said.
Maria -- whom Ruseva
originally named Stanka -- was born in a hospital in the Greek town of
Lamia, about 70 kilometers from Farsala and the Roma camp where she was
discovered earlier this month.
Ruseva says she spent three or four days in the hospital. She believes that's where her troubles started.
That woman said leave your girl here and I'll take care of like I was her mother. I trusted her.
Saska Ruseva, Maria's mother
Saska Ruseva, Maria's mother
"The doctors in the
hospital didn't give me any papers. If they had given me documents I
could have taken her to Bulgaria," Ruseva explained.
"I didn't know the language. The doctors said something like 'go away' and I grabbed the baby and got out," she said.
Ruseva said she took
care of her baby for the next seven months, breast-feeding her while her
husband picked odd jobs harvesting fruit and vegetables.
Times were so hard that
the couple said they spent many nights sleeping on the streets of Lamia
or bedding down in nearby olive groves, with the newborn.
Seven months after Maria
was born, the Rusevs were hired to pick oranges for a few days at a
farm near the Greek town of Patra. There Sashka Ruseva met a woman who
realized she was desperately poor and unable to care for Maria.
"A woman came to me and
said she was Bulgarian not Greek. She told me if I wanted she would take
care of my baby and that I could come back and collect her later,"
Ruseva said.
"She gave me her phone
number and when we got back in Bulgaria we telephoned her. We tried to
call but the phone was switched off," she added.
So far during the
investigation, police forces on both sides of the border had suggested
Ruseva met personally with the Greek Roma couple -- found caring for her
earlier this month -- and passed off the baby directly.
I kissed her. I was crying. I was worried. My heart was breaking
Saska Ruseva, Maria's mother
Saska Ruseva, Maria's mother
Defense lawyers for
Greek couple Salis and Dimoupolou say their clients met Ruseva
face-to-face. But when asked about the Greek Romas, Ruseva gave a blank
stare.
"Who is this man Christos Salis? I have never met these people," she said.
Although she denies
meeting Salis or Dimoupolou, Ruseva cannot remember many details about
the woman to whom she passed off Maria.
"I have no clue what her
name was. I did not ask and she did not say. That woman said leave your
girl here and I'll take care of like I was her mother. I trusted her,"
Ruseva said.
"The woman looked good. Her skin was not too pale, a bit like us. She was blond. With dyed blond hair," she said.
Despite the gaps in her story, Ruseva says she clearly remembers the moment she said goodbye to Maria.
"I kissed her. I was crying. I was worried. My heart was breaking," she said.
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