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View of the entrance to the Oslo courthouse, where the Oslo District Court is located Alamy Stock Photo

Women switched at birth in 1965 to sue Norway for breach of human rights

Authorities discovered the error when the girls were teenagers and covered it up.

IN 1965, A Norwegian woman gave birth to a girl in a private hospital and returned home with the baby seven days later.

When the baby developed dark curls that made the girl look different from herself, Karen Rafteseth Dokken assumed she just took after her husband’s mother.

It took nearly six decades to discover the true reason – her biological daughter had been mistakenly switched at birth in the maternity ward of the hospital in central Norway.

The girl she raised, Mona, was not the baby she gave birth to.

The babies, one born on 14 February and the other on 15 February, 1965, are now 59-year-old women who, with Rafteseth Dokken, are suing the state and the municipality.

In their case, which opened in the Oslo District Court yesterday, they say that their human rights were violated when authorities discovered the error when the girls were teenagers and covered it up.

They say Norwegian authorities had undermined their right to a family life, a principle enshrined in the European human rights convention, and demand an apology and compensation.

Rafteseth Dokken, now 78, was in tears as she described learning so many years later that she got the wrong baby, according to Norwegian broadcaster NRK.

“It was never my thought that Mona was not my daughter,” she said in court today. “She was named Mona after my mother.”

Mona described a sense of never belonging as she grew up.

That sense of uncertainty pushed her in 2021 to do a DNA test, which showed that she was not the biological daughter of those who raised her.

But the woman who raised the other baby knew long before.

A routine blood test in 1981 showed that the girl she was raising, Linda Karin Risvik Gotaas, was not biologically related.

The woman raising her, however, did not pursue a maternity case. Norwegian health authorities were informed of the mix-up in 1985, but did not tell the others involved.

Both women who were swapped at birth have said in interviews that it was a shock to learn about the mix-up, but the knowledge made pieces of their lives fall into place, explaining differences both in terms of appearance and demeanour.

Kristine Aarre Haanes, representing Mona, said the state “violated her right to her own identity for all these years. They kept it secret”.

Mona could have learned the truth when she was a young adult, but instead “she did not find out the truth until she was 57”.

“Her biological father has died. She has no contact with her biological mother,” added Aarre Haanes.

Circumstances surrounding the 1965 swap at Eggesboenes hospital are unclear, but media reports by NRK suggest there were several cases during the 1950s and 1960s where children were accidentally swapped at the same institution.

At the time, babies were kept together while their mothers rested in separate rooms.

In other cases, the errors were spotted before the children were permanently placed with the wrong families, according to the reports.

An official from the Norwegian ministry of heath and care services said the state was unaware of similar cases and that there were no plans for a public inquiry.

Asgeir Nygaard, representing the Norwegian state, is contesting the case on the grounds that the 1965 switch took place in a private institution and that the health directorate in the 1980s did not have the legal authority to inform the other families when they discovered the error.

“Documentation from that time indicates that government officials found the assessments difficult, inter alia because it was legally unclear what they could do,” he said in a statement to The Associated Press ahead of the trial’s opening.

“Therefore, in court, we will argue that there is no basis for compensation and that the claims being made are in any case statute-barred.”

The trial will run until Thursday, but it is not clear when a ruling is expected.

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