Two
toddlers accidentally swapped on the day they were born should stay with the
families who raised them and not be returned to their biological parents, a
court-appointed expert has said.
The two
children, a boy and a girl who are now aged four, were born on the same day in
2010 in a Johannesburg hospital but ended up being taken home and raised by the
wrong parents after nurses mixed up their identities.
The
families were unaware of the mistake until one of the mothers underwent tests
when her ex-husband refused to pay child maintenance because he believed he was
not the father.
One of the
mothers had initially wanted to get her biological child back, while the other
preferred to keep the one she had raised, leaving the North Gauteng High Court
to decide. The court
asked the University of Pretoria’s Centre for Child Law to investigate and
report back on what would be in the children’s best interests.
“The
recommendation is that the children should stay with the parents who have
raised them and should also be permitted to have contact with their biological
parents,” said Ann Skelton, director of the centre.
The court
has not set a date to decide the final fate of the children but Skelton said she
was hopeful its recommendation would be followed because it was now what both
parents wanted.
“There was
one mom who originally wanted to get her biological child back but she has
softened her position and she accepts now that it’s not really possible,”
Skelton said.
In May, a
lawyer for one of the mothers said the case raised a dilemma on a “biblical
scale”, referring to a story in the Bible when King Solomon adjudicates in a
dispute over a child between two women both claiming to be the infant’s mother.
Culled
from Reuters
No comments:
Post a Comment