Video after the cut
(CNN) -- Pale, blond and blue-eyed, the 4-year-old girl looks shyly into the camera.
This is no ordinary photo, though. The little girl pictured is at the center of a mystery.
Police in Greece say they
found her Thursday with a Roma couple posing as her parents but have no
idea who she is or where her real parents are.
They hope releasing the pictures of her might prompt people to come forward with information.
The girl was discovered
during a search of a home in a community of Roma, also known as gypsies,
near the town of Larissa in central Greece, police said.
Police first became
suspicious because the girl, who is blonde with very pale skin and blue
eyes, did not resemble the couple who claimed to be her parents.
When the couple were then
questioned, "they changed repeatedly their story about how they got the
child," a police statement said, compounding the officers' suspicions.
DNA testing then "showed
that there was not any genetic compatibility" between the girl and the
39-year-old man and the 40-year-old woman, the police said, meaning they
cannot be her biological parents.
The girl was immediately
t
aken from the couple and entrusted to the care of a charity called The
Smile of the Child. The charity said it would look after her "until a
solution in the best interest of the child is found."
The two people posing as
her parents have been arrested and face charges of abducting a minor,
as well as counts of falsifying identity documents, said the state-owned
Athens-Macedonian News Agency.
Among the suspect
documents found by police was a 2009 birth and baptism registration from
Athens authorities, the news agency said.
The 40-year-old woman
also had two different valid identification documents and, based on
family registration records, appears to have given birth to three
children between June and November 1993, and another three children
between October 1994 and February 1995, it said.
In fact, the state-run
AMNA news agency reported this woman had two family residence
registrations indicating she was mother to 10 children -- five girls and
a boy in Larissa, plus four girls in Trikala.
The 39-year-old man is registered as the father of four more children.
Greece's government has
promised to help the child. In the meantime, the little girl is being
given support by a police psychologist, the police said.
Anyone with information is asked to call the European Hotline for Missing Children or contact The Smile of the Child.
The girl's discovery
will likely prompt speculation she may have been abducted or trafficked
-- which, if proven, could serve to fuel prejudice against the Roma
community within Greece and elsewhere.
Rights group Amnesty
International has called on the European Union to take action to end
discrimination against the 6 million Roma, describing them as "the
largest and most disadvantaged minority in the region."
In May, Amnesty
International said Greece had been found guilty of discrimination
against Roma schoolchildren in three separate rulings by the European
Court of Human Rights.
SOURCE; CNN.COM
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