A lawyer for a Roma couple accused of abducting the girl found living with them says the pair adopted the child from her biological mother.
In a case that has
generated huge interest in Greece, authorities have charged the couple
with abducting the child they call "Maria." They appeared in court
Monday and were remanded into custody pending a trial.
Authorities released photos of the child, possibly 4 or 5 years old, last week and sought public tips on her birth identity.
Kostas Katsavos, one of
the couple's lawyers, told the Reuters news agency that they adopted
Maria with the permission of her biological mother.
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He conceded that the
adoption was "non-legal." But he said he believes the biological mother
will be located soon and will verify the couple's claims.
"They love her, and they took care as their own child," Katsavos said.
Haralambos Dimitriou,
head of the local Roma community, said the couple took the girl in
because her Bulgarian mother couldn't keep her. He said Maria was raised
like a "normal" child.
Video provided by the
Roma and shown to the media in the Roma settlement near Larissa does
appear to show Maria dancing with a woman who is believed to be the same
person now charged with abducting her. The Roma offered the video to
demonstrate that Maria was happy and in good care.
1,000 years of Roma discrimination
Police suspicions
Police say they are
suspicious of the records the couple provided for the child and for
other children in their care. In addition to the abduction charge, the
couple are accused of falsifying official documents.
Authorities asked
questions about Maria because she has fair skin and blonde hair while
her parents have darker complexions typical of Roma, also known as
gypsies, a race descended from Indian nomads who face widespread
discrimination in Europe.
Thousands of calls poured into Greece after authorities released photos of the girl last week.
Authorities released
photos of the two adults Monday, hoping the publicity will reach someone
who can provide more information about them.
Child 'doing much better'
A spokesman for the charity taking care of Maria said Sunday that she is in a group home where "she is doing much better."
Smile of the Child spokesman Panagiotis Pardalis said the girl was found in "bad living conditions, poor hygiene."
The child was found Thursday in the Roma community near Larissa in central Greece.
Authorities said the
blonde child looked nothing like the man and woman with her, and DNA
testing confirmed that they were not her biological parents.
A police statement said the couple "changed repeatedly their story about how they got the child."
The government news
agency said police found suspicious birth and baptism records as well as
family registrations that claimed the woman was mother to 10 children
and the man was the father of four more.
Marietta Palavra,
another attorney representing the couple, said DNA tests will show that
five of the children belong to the man claiming to be their father but
that there aren't conclusive results for the others. She would not
elaborate.
Europe's Roma discrimination shame
Prejudice against the Roma
Prejudice and discrimination against the Roma are widespread in Greece and elsewhere in Europe, Amnesty International says.
Maria's case plays into old prejudices about them stealing children for forced labor.
Pardalis mentioned such a
possibility, saying, "We don't have any other information if this girl
was forced to work or to beg on streets."
And the government news
agency raised "the possibility of the existence of a ring bringing
pregnant women to Greece from Bulgaria and then taking their children
for sale." The agency also cited past "reports" that empty coffins were
found for infants who supposedly were stillborn to foreign mothers in
Athens.
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