Thursday, 28 March, 2024
HomeMedico-LegalSpanish doctor who stole new-born babies is let off

Spanish doctor who stole new-born babies is let off

A Madrid court has let off a former doctor over stealing new-born babies from their mothers and supplying them to infertile couples. According to a BBC News report, the court found gynaecologist Eduardo Vela, 85, had committed the crimes but the charges were overruled because too much time had elapsed.

The report says he is the first person to go on trial for illegal adoptions that took place during and after the fascist dictatorship of General Franco but thousands more cases are suspected.

The Vela case focused on Inés Madrigal, allegedly abducted in 1969. After Franco's triumph in Spain's 1936-1939 civil war, many children were removed from families identified by the fascist regime as Republicans and given to families considered more deserving.

The report says the most serious abduction charge was brought against Vela by Madrigal in April 2012. But because she failed to bring the case for 25 years after she first became an adult – in 1987 – the case fell foul of the statute of limitations, which is 10 years. She was in court for the verdict, but Vela was absent. Madrigal and her lawyer say she will appeal to the Supreme Court so the doctor's crimes do not remain unpunished. The report says the Madrid provincial court found he had committed three crimes – abduction, fraud over pregnancy and forgery of documents.

Madrigal entered the court with her lawyer and came out an hour later with mixed feelings. "I'm happy because it's been proven that I was stolen, Dr Vela stole me," she is quoted as saying. But she was also disappointed that the doctor was now free: "It's a little hard to take that there would be a limitation on this crime."

She thanked and hugged her supporters, a handful of women also looking for missing children. One was Cristina, who gave birth in Madrid 1984: "We are really disappointed – it’s like being slapped in the face. We need to change the laws so there would be no statute of limitations for these crimes."

The report says Spain's stolen babies scandal went on for decades – from Franco's early years in power to the 1990s. It took a long time to surface because the Catholic Church and medical profession are highly respected, and Spanish law did not require the biological mother's name on the birth certificate.

The report says the scandal is closely linked to the Church, which under Franco assumed a prominent role in Spain's social services including hospitals, schools and children's homes. Nuns and priests compiled waiting lists of would-be adoptive parents, while doctors were said to have lied to mothers about the fate of their children.

An amnesty law, aimed at smoothing the transition to democracy, contributed to the cover-up, as courts and politicians refused to investigate baby-trafficking.

[link url="https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-45782359"]BBC News report[/link]

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