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Mother wins official parentage of daughter she unwittingly had with long-lost half-brother

Appeal court reinstates mother's link to child based on European Convention on Human Rights

Jon Sharman
Thursday 21 September 2017 07:09 EDT
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The court of appeal in Caen ruled the mother's link to her daughter should stand
The court of appeal in Caen ruled the mother's link to her daughter should stand (Getty)

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A girl born to an unwittingly incestuous couple has had her full parentage acknowledged by a French court, in apparent contravention of the country's civil code, it has been reported.

Eight-year-old Océane was born to half-siblings Rose-Marie and Hervé in 2009. The pair, who have the same mother, were raised apart and did not know each other until they met and fell in love in 2006, according to local media.

They did not learn of their shared parentage until they applied for a birth certificate for their daughter, according to The Local.

Rose-Marie raised the girl from birth, and the court of appeal in Caen ruled earlier this year that annulling her legal parentage of Océane would have "damaging consequences" for the youngster, overturning a previous judgement.

Lawyer Catherine Besson, representing Hervé, called it a "happy decision", Le Parisien reported. The father had argued that if one parental link had to be annulled it should be his, as he had not raised his daughter, she said.

The site said that ordinarily, children of incest can have official filiation registered only for one parent. Whether authorities will appeal the latest ruling was not known, it reported.

The judgement reportedly drew on the European Convention on Human Rights.

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