We will not give back our babies, insist the mothers given wrong daughters in hospital mix-up
Last updated at 15:52pm on 12.10.07The mothers at the centre of an astonishing baby mixup last night refused to swop back their daughters.
The two women, who have cared for the girls for ten months, said they could not go through with the exchange agreed earlier this week.
Jaroslava Trojanova and Jaroslava Cermakova, both 25, gave birth in the southern Czech town of Trebic last December.
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But it was only last month that the suspicions of one of the fathers led to the revelation that their children had been accidentally exchanged in hospital.
Jaroslava Cermakova and her husband Jan have been living with Veronika, although their real daughter is Nikola.
Jaroslava Trojanova and her partner, Libor Broza, took home Nikola, although Veronika is really their child.
The families struggled to cope with their extraordinary predicament before deciding on a pre-Christmas swap.
But yesterday Miss Trojanova was adamant she could not give up her non-biological baby.
"I cannot even begin to imagine a life without Nikola," said the factory worker.
"How can I now see her as someone else's child and not my own?"
Mrs Cermakova, who is pregnant again, also insisted she would not hand over the girl she was given.
"I have loved my daughter for almost a year now," she said.
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Jaroslava Cermakova with her real daughter Nikola
"This time cannot be erased from my heart. But I will learn to love my other, biological daughter too."
The couples have moved into a retreat and have discussed raising their children as 'one big family'.
Disagreeing with his partner, Mr Broza, 29, insisted he wanted to take home his real daughter Veronika.
"We are facing a horrible dilemma and the mothers are suffering the most," he said.
"But we will eventually need to swop our babies back.
"I would like to have my own daughter, although my love for Nikola will never diminish."
The county court in Zdar Nad Sazavou ruled yesterday that the birth certificates would not be changed and that the couples should simply swop babies.
That means that Nikola will legally assume Veronika's identity and vice versa.
Mr Cermakova, who is out of work, said: "We are completely cluelessas how to go about this, it is such a horrible situation.
"But we agree on one thing: our daughters will have four parents. We will raise them together as one big family.
"We are bonded together for ever by this terrible fate of ours. My wife and I, we say that we will have two daughters from now on.
"It would be impossible to simply give up on our baby, even if we are not the biological parents."
The Cermakovas live in Trebic, 30 minutes' drive from Jablonov, the home village of Mr Broza and Miss Trojanova.
Mr Cermakova, 26, said the families-were considering whether they could settle in the same place.
The mistake arose when nurses failed to write the children's surnames on their leg bracelets.
The mix-up was revealed after Mr Broza, a lorry driver, became suspicious because both he and his partner are dark-haired while their baby was blonde.
He took a DNA test, the results of which strained his relationship with Miss Trojanova until she had a DNA test herself and they found neither was related to Nikola.
The shocked couple alerted Trebic hospital and more DNA tests confirmed the blunder.
Reader views (15)
Here's a sample of the latest views published. You can click view all to read all views that readers have sent in.
The father had the DNA because of comments made be other people about the baby not looking like EITHER of them.
Tragic set of circumstances that they had no control over. I think maybe with time the couples will be able to make the swap, once they have gotten over the shock, its going to take time. Its better now whilst the babies won't remember than if this had been discovered 10 years down the line!
- Julie, Essex
If the mothers both think this, then it's the right decision. The children are too young to understand anything other than that the person who has loved them and cared for them since their birth is their mother. Someone else taking them over would inevitably cause distress, and in the worse case a new maternal bond might completely fail to form. They've been accidentally but successfully adopted, and if the mothers both still think of the "wrong" child as their child now the truth is revealed, that should be the end of it (other than legalising matters with adoption papers).
- Nigel, London
I think that in saying they'll live together and raise both girls as one big family is actually a very responsible and mature way to approach the situation.
- Marg, London



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