The family of the accused in the Zephany Nurse kidnapping case have vowed to stand by her â150 percentâ.
On Monday, the 52-year-old woman was sentenced to an effective ten years behind bars for kidnapping, fraud and contravention of the Childrenâs Act.
Outside the Western Cape High Court, emotions ran high as a scuffle broke out between the Nurse family and the family of the accused.
The sister of Morne Nurse, biological father of Zephany Nurse, said the accusedâs family had insulted her.
Chantall Berry said: âThis guy came and said he will smack the glasses from my face. They want to go on. She belongs to us. She has our DNA. Her DNA will never change.â
A family member of the accused, who asked not to be named, said: âObviously there are emotions flying around. We are human. You can imagine. The bottom line is the family is more worried about Zephany.â
She said the court had said the accused was not remorseful, but âthe first thing that comes out of her mind is that she is so sorry for Zephany, for the things that happenedâ.
The public gallery was packed in court room 1 as Western Cape High Court Judge President John Hlophe told the Lavender Hill woman that the pain she had caused the Nurse family had been âimmenseâ.
He said: âAt the very least one would expect you to apologise, but you chose not to.â
The accused has stuck to her story that she had bought Zephany from a woman called Sylvia who had told her the child was not wanted by her biological parents.
Hlophe dismissed her version as a âfairytaleâ when he convicted her in March, instead finding that she had snatched Zephany from her motherâs hospital bedside on April 30, 1997.
On Monday, he said: âYou said you had bought the child â you are the first to do so in the world.â
The accusedâs family blew kisses to her as she was led down to holding cells after sentencing.
Zephanyâs true identity was revealed early last year when her younger biological sister started high school at the same school as her. When classmates commented on the siblingsâ striking resemblance the younger sister told her father, Morne Nurse.
After conducting his own investigations, he contacted the Hawks. DNA tests confirmed she was indeed the child they had been searching for for almost two decades.
The teenager has not been allowed contact with the accused since her arrest, but has been living with the kidnapperâs husband and the man she believed was her biological father.
During argument in aggravation of sentence, her biological parents said their relationship with Zephany was strained.
Outside court on Monday, maternal grandmother, Marilyn Francis told reporters that Zephany was in contact with her biological mother, Celeste Nurse, and had contacted Celeste on her birthday on Sunday to wish her.
The teenâs biological father Morne Nurse said after sentencing that âhealing could now beginâ and that he was glad the case was finally over.
-African News Agency (ANA)