South African woman jailed for kidnapping baby and raising her

Zephany Nurse reunited with parents after befriending girl she later found out was her sister

Morne Nurse(C), the biological father of Zephany Nurse,  leaves the Cape Town High court, after attending the sentencing proceedings where a  woman  who has been convicted of kidnapping was sentenced to  10 years in prison. Photograph: Rodger Boschrodger/AFP/Getty Images
Morne Nurse(C), the biological father of Zephany Nurse, leaves the Cape Town High court, after attending the sentencing proceedings where a woman who has been convicted of kidnapping was sentenced to 10 years in prison. Photograph: Rodger Boschrodger/AFP/Getty Images

A South African woman who kidnapped a newborn baby nearly two decades ago from a hospital and raised her as her own has been sentenced to 10 years in jail.

Zephany Nurse was reunited last year with her biological parents, Morne and Celeste Nurse, after the couple's second daughter befriended a girl at school who looked remarkably like her.

A police investigation and DNA tests showed that the two girls were sisters and that the new friend was the Nurses’ missing child.

Zephany Nurse's biological parents were in court in Cape Town for the sentencing, but their daughter was not.

READ SOME MORE

Judge John Hlophe said the crimes that the kidnapper committed were serious but that he had taken into account her previously clean record and other mitigating circumstances in deciding the sentence, according to South African news outlet News24.

Publicly, the girl is known by the name given to her by her biological parents and used in the media in the years since her disappearance.

After she was found, the girl chose to continue using the name given to her by the kidnapper.

To protect her privacy, a judge ordered that her adopted name and the name of her kidnapper not be used by the media.

The kidnapper snatched the three-day-old baby from her sleeping mother’s hospital bedside in Cape Town in April 1997, state prosecutors said.

The prosecution also said the woman defrauded authorities when she registered the child as her own daughter in 2003 under a false birth date.

AP