Richard Cushworth and his wife Mercedes Casanellas, who is from El Salvador, welcomed a
son at a hospital in San Salvador in May 2015, but say they
immediately noticed that something was wrong.
The couple, who live in
Dallas, Texas, (pictured right with the 'swapped' child and left, Ms
Casanellas with their biological child) did a DNA test 3 months after the birth and
found that the child handed to them by hospital staff is not related to
either of them. The couple now fear their light-skinned baby was
snatched deliberately by staff at the exclusive Ginecologico private
hospital in the country's capital San Salvador to sell to child
traffickers.
Mr
Cushworth, whose parents hail from Bradford, West Yorkshire, and his
wife had travelled to the capital San Salvador in order for Ms
Casanellas to give birth in her home country.
Ms
Casanellas says she noticed that the child that staff claimed was hers
had a darker skin colour than she remembered at birth, but she was told
that she was mistaken. They believe the child has been sold to traffickers.
In
an emotional interview with a local TV station, a teary Ms Casanellas
said: 'We haven't been able to sleep thinking about where he is, and who
has him. We
just want them to give us our son back.' Mr Cushworth, who met Ms
Casanellas when he worked as a missionary in El Salvador, added: 'It's a
horrible situation. I have a child and I don't know where he is. Someone
took
my child and I have no idea where he is, who is taking care of him,
what has happened to him. Is he in the country? It's awful. I sometimes
try not to think about this because it is so frightening.'
Ms
Casanella's obstetrician-gyneacologist, Dr Alejandro Guidos (pictured above), who the
couple accuse of masterminding the plot, was arrested on Thursday,
according to their family's lawyer Francisco Meneses.
Ms
Casanellas said that, from the fifth month of her pregnancy, she
remembered how Dr Guidos would repeatedly tell her that her child would
be dark-skinned, even though the father is white.
She
said: 'I always thought that was strange. How would he know that from
the ultra-sound scans, and why would he keep saying it?'
Above are photos of the baby she says she gave birth to
Remembering
her baby's birth, she said: 'I was very stressed at first because the
baby took a while to start breathing, but then I held him and remember
thinking that he looked like my husband.
'He was very white and had similar features. I remember seeing his genitals and thinking that they were white and pinkish.'
Ms
Casanellas and her husband took a number of photos of their biological
son after the birth, which they say is further proof that their child
was swapped.
'But
then the anaesthetist came and told me that I was very nervous and that
they were going to give me something to put me to sleep. After that I
don't remember anything, until I woke up the next morning.
'Around
8am, they started to bring the babies to their mothers, and I waited
for mine. But when I took him I saw that he was very different to the
one I had held in the delivery room. When I changed his clothes I
noticed that his genitals were very dark and not rosy like how I'd
remembered.
'I said to the nurse, 'look, his genitals are very dark', and she told me, 'no, that's normal, that's normal''.
Despite the
doubts, the couple took the baby back home to Dallas, Texas, but over
the coming months family and friends also noticed the child's darker
colour and lack of resemblance with his parents.
Ms
Casanellas said: 'I would take photos of him and put them next to my
husband, trying to find something of us in him. I kept trying to
convince myself that he was really ours, that over time we would begin
to see a resemblance.
'But my motherly instincts kept telling me that he wasn't mine.'
The
family have reportedly already investigated all the other babies born
at the hospital on the same day and found that all are with their
correct parents - reinforcing their belief that their own son was
stolen.
The
baby was three months old when the couple finally found to courage to
take a DNA test, which showed he has a 0.00 per cent probability of
being their son.
Desperate to find the baby she gave birth to, the couple has since rushed back to El Salvador.
On
Saturday, Mr Cushworth and his wife had DNA tests performed on all
the male children born at the hospital on the same day as their son -
May 21st.
Out
of the ten other children born on the same day, four were male and six
were female, but the newspaper did not reveal the outcome of the DNA
tests.
At
first San Salvador's Ginecologio hospital, considered the best private
hospital in the country, denied that the baby could have been swapped,
saying it was 'impossible' due to their 'high standards' of control.
But
after Dr Guidos's arrest, following the family's high-profile TV
interview, the hospital ordered an internal investigation and promised
that the situation will be 'rectified'.
The
country's Attorney General has now ordered a criminal investigation
into the baby's disappearance amid claims a trafficking gang, led by Dr
Guido, has been operating inside the hospital.
Source: UK Daily Mail
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