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Spanish woman sues for millions after learning she was switched at birth

A 19-year-old woman is seeking millions of euros in damages after it emerged that she was accidentally swapped with another newborn at a Spanish hospital nearly two decades ago.

Spanish woman sues for millions after learning she was switched at birth
Photo: Loic Venance/AFP

The babies were mixed up in 2002 after they were born five hours apart and placed in incubators at the San Millan de Logrono in northern Spain, due to a “one-off human error,” regional health authorities said.

The error was discovered four years ago after one of the girls who was switched underwent a DNA test as part of dispute over child support payments.

The woman, now 19, is demanding compensation of €3 million ($3.5 million) from health authorities for having been handed to the wrong family, her lawyer Jose Saez-Morga told AFP.

“We are talking about huge damages, which will last her whole life and which will never be repaired,” he said.

Health authorities in the Rioja region have so far only offered the woman, who prefers to remain anonymous, 215,000 euros in compensation, he added.

The regional health chief, Sara Alba, said computer systems back then did not have as many details as they do today, and stressed that a similar mix-up could not happen again.

Officials are “not aware” of any other cases at the hospital, which has since closed, she told a news conference on Tuesday.

“We have not been able to determine who is to blame for this mistake,” Alba said.

“It was a one-off human error which could not happen today. We can guarantee that this will not happen again.”

Saez-Morga said the other young woman switched at birth and her family have also undergone DNA testing.

She has also asked to remain anonymous and has so far not filed a lawsuit, he added.

According to Spanish media reports, one woman was sent to live with a couple who she believed to be her parents while the other, who has filed the lawsuit, was raised mostly by a woman she mistakenly thought was her grandmother.

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LAWSUIT

Climate campaigners sue Italian government for failing to tackle climate crisis

Environment campaigners are suing the Italian government for failing to sufficiently tackle the climate crisis, in a move coinciding with World Environment Day

Climate campaigners sue Italian government for failing to tackle climate crisis
The 203 plaintiffs included environmental organisations, Italian citizens, foreign residents and activists from Italy's Fridays for Future movement. Photo: Marco Bertorello / AFP

In the first legal action of its kind in Italy, climate activists submitted a lawsuit to Rome’s civil court on Saturday denouncing government inaction on the climate crisis.

The 203 plaintiffs, which included environmental organisations, Italian citizens, foreign residents and activists from Italy’s Fridays for Future movement, are asking the court to order the State to adopt more ambitious climate policies and emission reduction targets.

READ ALSO: Italy postpones plastic tax again due to Covid-19 pandemic

After being appointed prime minister in February, Mario Draghi created a “superministry” to ensure a transition to a green energy drives recovery and makes use of European Union funds.

“Ours will be an ecological government,” Draghi said in his first cabinet meeting.

But campaigners criticised the 750-billion-euro pandemic Recovery Fund, which included the aim of Italy becoming “carbon free” by 2050, for not being ambitious enough.

In its latest decree containing economic support measures, the Decreto Sostegni bis, Draghi’s government delayed a long-planned plastic tax again citing economic pressure.

READ ALSO:  What is Italy doing about the shocking level of plastic pollution on its coastline?

The tax, which was created in 2020 and intended to promote a reduction in the production and consumption of single-use plastics, has been delayed again with the government citing economic factors connected to the pandemic.

The tax on plastic was scheduled to come into force on July 1st this year but has.faced a series of delays

The Italian governmen said it was delaying the ecological measure, “in consideration of the contingent and difficult conditions of the economic sectors, which would be burdened by the tax, in connection with the continuation of the epidemiological emergency from Covid-19”.

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