on โ19-10-2013 08:08 AM
Who is she? Police are appealing for help identifying this four-year-old girl who was found on a gypsy camp in Greece after she was allegedly abducted
Greek authorities have requested international help to identify a four-year-old girl found living in appalling conditions in a gypsy camp with a couple whom they have arrested and charged with abducting her.
The child was found on Wednesday near Farsala in central Greece during a routine search of the camp by police looking for drugs and weapons.
The girl reportedly sparked one of the officer's curiosity as she is blonde, pale skinned and bore no resemblance to the other Roma children or the couple who claimed to be her parents.
A 39-year-old man and a 40-year-old woman have been arrested and charged with abducting a minor.
Police said they offered conflicting accounts about the girl, one claiming that she was found in a blanket, the other claiming she had been handed to them by strangers.
Police said today that DNA testing proved the girl, who is believed to be called Maria, was not related to the couple.
'Her features suggest that she might be from an eastern or northern (European) country,' regional police chief Panayiotis Tzavaras said.
Police have notified Interpol for assistance.
Detectives say they also found drugs and unregistered firearms in other parts of the settlement, which is about 280 kilometers (170 miles) north of Athens.
The police statement said the couple claimed to have a total 14 children, and had registered different numbers with authorities in three different parts of Greece.
Officers found three minors living with them in the settlement who appear to be their children - although that hasn't yet been verified by DNA testing.
The case bears a disturbing similarity to theories about the disappearance of British toddler Madeleine McCann, who went missing on a family holiday in Portugal on May 3, 2007.
The girl is now in the care of the charity 'A child's smile,' which said today it has sought the assistance of European and global groups for lost or abused children in tracking her parents.
She does not speak other languages than Roma but appears to understand Greek and is being communicated with by sign language.
She was said to traumatised when she arrived at her care home but has since settled and is living in a safe family environment with other children of her age.
Distress: Dirty and grimacing as her photo is taken, the little girl is now the centre of an international appeal. Authorities hope her parents can be found so the family can be reunited
Police said the child was found near Farsala in central Greece during a crackdown on illegal activities by Roma
A medical examination is ongoing.
Panayiotis Pardalis, a spokesman for the charity, said: 'It was obvious that she was not a Roma girl.
'She was afraid and under some psychological pressure when she arrived. Colleagues have been trying to communicate but are struggling.
'She seems to understand Greek but cannot speak it. She was living under bad conditions and was very dirty but is now safe.'
Charity director Costas Giannopoulos said the child was undergoing medical examinations.
'We are shocked by how easy it is for people to register children as their own,' he told private Skai TV.
on โ25-10-2013 11:28 AM
@am*3 wrote:The Bulgarian woman has 8 childen, 2 of the younger children are very fair and look similiar to Maria.
That the authorities would do a DNA test first, goes without saying.
"The Bulgarian woman has 8 childen, 2 of the younger children are very fair and look similiar to Maria."
But are they really her bio childen? (sic) I think further DNA tests would be required to prove that.
Goes without saying, but I felt like saying it anyway. Hope that meets with your approval.
pffft.
on โ25-10-2013 11:30 AM
on โ25-10-2013 11:45 AM
@icyfroth wrote:
@**meep** wrote:
@icyfroth wrote:They'll have to do DNA tests to confim the Bulgarian woman's claims, but judging by the picture you wouldn't think so.
What do you mean?
Sorry Meep...what do you mean what do I mean?
LOL what Am said - Maria resembles their other children. But again, I am confusing the different reports. The Irish case, with the 2 blond children, the DNA tests confirmed the Gypsies were the parents.
And this Bulgarian case, where the tests results are not known yet.
I think.
on โ25-10-2013 11:49 AM
@**meep** wrote:
And this Bulgarian case, where the tests results are not known yet.
I think.
I heard this morning that the mother admitted to selling Maria to the gypsies because she had too many children, but the test will confirm that or not.
I also heard that there is NO birth register in Greece. Hard to believe.
on โ25-10-2013 11:49 AM
The Bulgarian mother, with 2 younger children who are fair, aren't her own children??? No wonder meep is
confused. There has been NO suggestion by anyone (esp the authorities) that any of the children living with her and her husband aren't hers.
I read this article this morning, maybe a bit less sensational reporting than the one in a previous post.
on โ25-10-2013 11:49 AM
@**meep** wrote:
@icyfroth wrote:
@**meep** wrote:
@icyfroth wrote:They'll have to do DNA tests to confim the Bulgarian woman's claims, but judging by the picture you wouldn't think so.
What do you mean?
Sorry Meep...what do you mean what do I mean?
LOL what Am said - Maria resembles their other children. But again, I am confusing the different reports. The Irish case, with the 2 blond children, the DNA tests confirmed the Gypsies were the parents.
And this Bulgarian case, where the tests results are not known yet.
I think.
a 'resemblance" because they're blond and fair-skinned isn't much to go on methinks.
โ25-10-2013 11:52 AM - edited โ25-10-2013 11:54 AM
polks: there is no CENTRAL birth register in Greece. Which allows people to register the same child more than once in different parts of Greece. For dishonest reasons like getting paid more Govt welfare money for each registered child.
The Bulgarian mother says she received no money for the female child she gave away. I don't think anyone would admit to receiving money for a child though. Also she never registered the child when it was born, which is an offence also.
on โ25-10-2013 11:56 AM
icy - the authorities aren't concerned with the parentage of the children living with the Bulgarian parents. If they gave away one child because they couldn't afford it, they would hardly bring 2 more home.. especially living in the povo conditons they live in.
on โ25-10-2013 11:59 AM
What's with all the hair dye? A bit cruel IMO.
on โ25-10-2013 11:59 AM
The Bulgarian mother has come forward and says she thinks Maria is the child she gave away when living in Greece. The authorities are going to do a DNA test to prove/disprove that. That is what this story is about, nothing more.
If the Bulgarian mother had 2 children living with her that weren't hers (she bought them, stole them etc) she would hardly have initiated contact with the police.