Keep Up With Global Black News

Sign up to our newsletter to get the latest updates and events from the leading Afro-Diaspora publisher straight to your inbox.

Avatar photo
BY Abena Agyeman-Fisher, 6:48am March 10, 2016,

South African Baby Snatcher Found Guilty

Avatar photo
by Abena Agyeman-Fisher, 6:48am March 10, 2016,
Zephany Nurse Kidnapper

Zephany Nurse Kidnapper

The unidentified woman (pictured) charged with kidnapping Zephany Nurse, the first child of Celeste and Mome Nurse, in 1997 has been found guilty, reports BBC.

RELATED: SOUTH AFRICAN WOMAN ACCUSED OF KIDNAPPING BABY 18 YEARS AGO PLEADS ‘NOT GUILTY’

On the harrowing disappearance of Zephany, Face2Face Africa previously reported:

On April 28, 1997, Zephany was born in Groote Schuur Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa.

Two days later, a woman, who is said to have “befriended” Celeste, Zephany’s mother, is said to have “convinced her to hand over her daughter so that she could sleep.”

By the time Celeste awoke from her slumber, Zephany was nowhere to be found…and she wouldn’t be seen again until nearly two decades later.

Celeste and Mome Nurse

Celeste and Mome Nurse pictured center

Of her experience, Celeste, while crying, told the court, “My baby was crying and I saw a person

Celeste and Zephany Nurse

dressed in maroon clothes standing by the door. She asked if she could pick up the child.

“I was in pain and under medication. I fell asleep. Next thing I remember is the nurse asking where my child was.

“We ran around looking for the child in every floor of the hospital. The baby was gone. Nowhere to be found. I thought it was a joke.”

But the kidnapping was real.

Zephany wouldn’t be found until fate would have her befriend a girl she eerily resembled in school last year.

Eventual DNA testing revealed what the Nurses suspected: Cassidy’s friend was indeed her long lost sister.

On the stand, though, the unnamed kidnapper, who had been living in the Nurses same neighborhood of Cape Flats in Cape Town all these years, denied stealing Zephany.

Instead, she claimed that after suffering a miscarriage, a woman named Sylvia handed her the newborn at a crowded railway station.

Sylvia is yet to be located.

The woman also maintained that, afterward, she legally adopted the baby, but said she had misplaced the adoption papers.

Judge John Hiophe didn’t buy the 50-year-old’s story, who has remained unidentified in order to protect Zephany’s identity. In addition to calling her account a “fairytale,” he ultimately found her guilty of kidnapping.

Heartache Continues for Nurses

Over the weekend, Zephany issued what must have been a disappointing statement for the Nurses by criticizing the media for their coverage of “her mother,” “Don’t you think for once that that is my mother? Whether it is true or not is not for you to toy with,” she said.

And despite the developments of the past year, Zephany has chosen to continue living with the man she knew as her father.

In her statement, she defended her “father’s” predicament in all of this, asking, “How would you feel as a father, desperately broken but still finds the goodness to support his family?”

SEE ALSO: Reggae Star Luciano’s Son Killed in Kingston, Appeal for Help Made on YouTube

Last Edited by:Abena Agyeman-Fisher Updated: September 12, 2018

Conversations

Must Read

Connect with us

Join our Mailing List to Receive Updates

Face2face Africa | Afrobeatz+ | BlackStars

Keep Up With Global Black News and Events

Sign up to our newsletter to get the latest updates and events from the leading Afro-Diaspora publisher straight to your inbox, plus our curated weekly brief with top stories across our platforms.

No, Thank You