Up to
300,000 Spanish babies were stolen from their parents and sold for adoption
over a period of five decades, a new investigation reveals.
The
children were trafficked by a secret network of doctors, nurses, priests and
nuns in a widespread practice that began during General Franco’s dictatorship
and continued until the early Nineties.
Hundreds of
families who had babies taken from Spanish hospitals are now battling for an
official government investigation into the scandal.
Several
mothers say they were told their first-born children had died during or soon
after they gave birth.
Identity crisis: Randy Ryder as a baby being cradled in a Malaga hospital in 1971 by the woman who bought him |
But the
women, often young and unmarried, were told they could not see the body of the
infant or attend their burial.
In reality,
the babies were sold to childless couples whose devout beliefs and financial
security meant that they were seen as more appropriate parents.
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Official documents
were forged so the adoptive parents’ names were on the infants’ birth
certificates.
In many
cases it is believed they were unaware that the child they received had been
stolen, as they were usually told the birth mother had given them up.
Journalist
Katya Adler, who has investigated the scandal, says: ‘The situation is
incredibly sad for thousands of people.
‘There are
men and women across Spain whose lives have been turned upside-down by
discovering the people they thought were their parents actually bought them for
cash. There are also many mothers who have maintained for years that their
babies did not die – and were labelled “hysterical” – but are now discovering
that their child has probably been alive and brought up by somebody else all this
time.’
Reunited: Randy Ryder with Manoli Pagador, who believes she may be his real mother |
Experts
believe the cases may account for up to 15 per cent of the total adoptions that
took place in Spain between 1960 and 1989.
It began as
a system for taking children away from families deemed politically dangerous to
the regime of General Franco, which began in 1939. The system continued after
the dictator’s death in 1975 as the Catholic church continued to retain a
powerful influence on public life, particularly in social services.
It was not
until 1987 that the Spanish government, instead of hospitals, began to regulate
adoptions.
The scandal
came to light after two men, Antonio Barroso and Juan Luis Moreno, discovered
they had been stolen as babies.
Mr Moreno’s
‘father’ confessed on his deathbed to having bought him as a baby from a priest
in Zaragoza in northern Spain. He told his son he had been accompanied on the
trip by Mr Barroso’s parents, who bought Antonio at the same time for 200,000
pesetas – a huge sum at the time.
‘That was
the price of an apartment back then,’ Mr Barroso said. ‘My parents paid it in
instalments over the course of ten years because they did not have enough
money.’
Bought for cash: Journalist Katya Adler with Juan Luis Moreno, who was sold as a baby |
DNA tests
have proved that the couple who brought up Mr Barroso were not his biological
parents and the nun who sold him has admitted to doing so.
When the
pair made their case public, it prompted mothers all over the country to come
forward with their own experiences of being told their babies had died, but
never believing it. One such woman was Manoli Pagador, who has begun searching
for her son.
A BBC
documentary, This World: Spain’s Stolen Babies, follows her efforts to discover
if he is Randy Ryder, a stolen baby who was brought up in Texas and is now aged
40.
In some
cases, babies’ graves have been exhumed, revealing bones that belong to adults
or animals. Some of the graves contained nothing at all.
The BBC
documentary features an interview with an 89-year-old woman named Ines Perez,
who admitted that a priest encouraged her to fake a pregnancy so she could be
given a baby girl due to be born at Madrid’s San Ramon clinic in 1969. ‘The
priest gave me padding to wear on my stomach,’ she says.
It is
claimed that the San Ramon clinic was one of the major centres for the
practice.
Many
mothers who gave birth there claim that when they asked to see their child
after being told it had died, they were shown a baby’s corpse that appeared to
be freezing cold.
The BBC
programme shows photographs taken in the Eighties of a dead baby kept in a
freezer, allegedly to show grieving mothers.
Despite
hundreds of families of babies who disappeared in Spanish hospitals calling on
the government to open an investigation into the scandal, no nationally
co-ordinated probe has taken place.
As a result
of amnesty laws passed after Franco’s death, crimes that took place during his
regime are usually not examined. Instead, regional prosecutors across the
country are investigating each story on a case-by-case basis, with 900
currently under review.
But Ms
Adler says: ‘There is very little political will to get to the bottom of the
situation.’
There are
believed to be thousands more cases that will never come to light because the
stolen children fear their adoptive parents will be seen as criminals.
Many of the
families of stolen babies have taken DNA tests in the hope of eventually being
matched with their children. Some matches have already been made but, without a
nationally co-ordinated database, reuniting lost relatives will be a very
difficult process.
This World:
Spain’s Stolen Babies is on BBC2 on Tuesday at 9pm.
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