DNA tests have confirmed that a Bulgarian Roma couple are the parents of a mysterious girl in Greece known as Maria, authorities said.
Genetic profiles of Sasha Ruseva and her husband Atanas matched that of the girl, said Svetlozar Lazarov, a Bulgarian interior ministry official.
Ruseva, 35, has said she gave birth to a baby girl four years ago in Greece while working as an olive picker, but gave the child away because she was too poor to care for her.
Maria has been in temporary care since last week after authorities raided a Roma settlement in central Greece and later discovered that girl was not the child of a Greek Roma couple she was living with.
The Greek couple, Christos Salis, 39, and Eleftheria Dimopoulou, 40, have been arrested and charged for allegedly abducting Maria, as well as document fraud.
A lawyer said they plan to seek legal custody.
The couple have told authorities they received Maria after an informal adoption.
Under Greek law, child abduction charges can include cases where a minor is voluntarily given away by its parents outside the legal adoption process.
The Bulgarian prosecutor’s office and Greek authorities are “seeking clarification on whether the mother agreed to sell the child”, Bulgaria’s interior ministry said.
Ruseva has had two more children since giving birth to Maria. They live in a dilapidated, mud-floored house outside the remote Bulgarian village of Nikolaevo.
At the Roma camp where Maria was found, residents said the couple had been vindicated.