Cape Argus

Zephany accused: ‘I was desperate’

Kidnap suspect admits to lying about losing her own baby

- Gadeeja Abbas STAFF REPORTER gadeeja.abbas@inl.co.za

‘ YES, I WAS desperate. But not desperate enough to steal a baby.” This was the testimony of a Lavender Hill woman on trial in the Western Cape High Court for kidnapping baby Zephany Nurse 19 years ago.

The soft- spoken seamstress, whose identity is being withheld to protect the new identity of the girl whom she raised as her own, has pleaded not guilty to fraud, kidnapping and contraveni­ng sections of the Children’s Act.

During gruelling cross-examinatio­n yesterday, the usually timid woman explained to State prosecutor Evadne Kortje it was not in her nature to “steal children”.

She reiterated statements made in her plea explanatio­n and denied she took Zephany from a maternity ward at Groote Schuur Hospital on April 30, 1997 while the child’s biological mother, Celeste Nurse, was recovering from a c-section.

For the first time since the start of the trial, the 51-year-old woman gave a descriptio­n of Sylvia, the woman she claims handed her Zephany at a train station in Wynberg.

The court also heard the woman deliberate­ly lied to her friends, family and husband about being pregnant. She carried on the ruse for five months, even after a doctor confirmed she had miscarried her child in 1996.

She said she kept the secret in the hopes

that the fertility treatment, supplied by Sylvia, or the adoption, would produce a baby.

She said she met Sylvia in the waiting room at Tygerberg Hospital while undergoing gynaecolog­ical treatment for “infertilit­y” in 1996.

She said the woman, who did not produce any accreditat­ion or divulge any personal informatio­n, addressed other women in the waiting room.

“( Sylvia) was a short, older- looking woman. Older than what we (other woman in the waiting room at Tygerberg) were at the time.

“She was in her early 40s. She had brown skin and her hair was short,” the woman said.

Kortje led the woman to admit that at the time of accepting Sylvia’s propositio­n of fertility treatment and “adoption”, she was not yet diagnosed as a person suffering from infertilit­y because she had fallen pregnant and miscarried before.

“Why were you so desperate for a baby, why did you have to have a baby then?” asked Kortje.

The woman explained she paid Sylvia a deposit of R800 for the fertility treatment, which consisted of a course of five tablets, and only later met with her in Cape Town again to discuss the possibilit­y of what she thought was adoption at the time.

The woman, however, admitted she paid for Zephany by giving Sylvia the outstandin­g amount of R2 200 for the “completion of the adoption process”.

Kortje then inquired about the “criteria” of the child she would be adopting, and the woman replied there weren’t any.

“Surely you would not have taken a twoyear-old baby if you were pretending to be pregnant? What would (your husband) have said?” asked Kortje.

It was then that the woman revealed that her husband was unaware she had lost the baby in December 1996, because, “they (her friends, family and husband) believed I was just fat”.

The woman is currently out on R5 000 bail.

Western Cape Judge President John Hlophe adjourned proceeding­s to allow the State to prepare for further cross-examinatio­n today.

HER HUSBAND WAS UNAWARE SHE HAD LOST THE BABY IN DECEMBER 1996, BECAUSE, ‘THEY (HER FRIENDS, FAMILY AND HUSBAND) BELIEVED I WAS JUST FAT’

 ?? PICTURES: BRENTON GEACH ?? FAMILY: Zephany Nurse’s biological father, Morné Nurse, outside the Western Cape High Court.
PICTURES: BRENTON GEACH FAMILY: Zephany Nurse’s biological father, Morné Nurse, outside the Western Cape High Court.
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