Mexican woman claims she was one of 30,000 babies stolen from Spain

Ligia Ceballos Franco says she was stolen from parents in Spain under General Franco and placed with a family in Mexico

Ligia Ceballos Franco
Ligia Ceballos Franco says her biological parents were told she had died at birth. Photograph: Amnesty International

A woman has filed a complaint with prosecutors in Mexico, claiming that she was stolen as a baby in Spain during the dictatorship of Francisco Franco and handed over to a well-heeled Mexican family who raised her as their own.

Ligia Ceballos Franco said on Thursday that she may be among an estimated 30,000 babies who were taken from their real parents under the Franco dictatorship from 1938 to 1975.

She claims the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Merida facilitated the adoption. The Merida archdiocese did not respond to request for comment.

After being told she was adopted, Ceballos Franco found a local government document in Madrid saying a baby had been handed over to her Mexican parents in 1968.

She found a birth record for Diana Ortíz Ramirez, which may be her. Her biological parents were apparently told she had died at birth. The targets of such deception were often opponents of the Franco regime.

Ceballos Franco wants Mexican prosecutors to conduct an investigation, based on a provision in the law against forced disappearances that covers hiding or denying someone’s identity.

“This could mark a precedent in the judicial concept of the search for the truth,” said Amnesty International’s Mexico director, Tania Reneaum.

Lawyers argue that the statute of limitations does not apply until the disappearance – or identity theft – are cleared up.