Asunta Fong Yang was
adopted as a baby by a wealthy Spanish couple. Aged 12, she was found dead
beside a country road. Not long after, her mother and father were arrested
One day in late June
2001, Rosario Porto, a petite, dark-haired lawyer from Santiago de Compostela,
northern Spain, sat nervously on a flight to China beside her husband Alfonso
Basterra, a quiet man from the Basque country, who worked as a freelance
journalist. The couple, both in their mid-30s, were on their way to adopt a
baby girl. Porto swallowed two tablets of Orfidal – a common anti-anxiety
medicine that she had used before then – but remained too agitated and excited
to sleep.
The couple had had no
trouble persuading local Spanish authorities that they would make good parents
and that their child would be surrounded by a loving extended family. Porto’s
father was a lawyer who had been honorary consul for France in Santiago, and
her mother was a university lecturer in history of art. They had given their
daughter a flat that occupied a whole floor of a four-storey block in what some
call Santiago’s “VIP zone”, home to the city’s upper middle class. The flat was
decorated in the bold tones – blues, greens and yellows – that Porto liked, and
full of art, curiosities and colourful rugs from around the world. The child’s
bedroom would have wallpaper covered in clouds and suns.
At that time, adopting
from China was unusual. Nobody in Santiago, a solidly bourgeois city of 93,000
people, had done so before, and only a few Chinese children had been adopted in
the wider region of Galicia, a mostly rural area of 2.7 million people. But
Spanish parents wanting to adopt were beginning to cast a wide net. With a
plummeting birth rate and strict adoption laws, there were relatively few
Spanish children needing homes, while adopting abroad was relatively quick and
easy – at least for couples who could afford the costs of €10,000 or more. By
2004, Spain would rank second in the world for foreign adoptions – behind only
the United States. The following year, adoptions of Chinese children peaked at
2,750. Of these children, 95% were girls (the one-child policy placed an added
premium on boys).
Adopting a baby girl
from abroad brought the satisfaction and, for some, the moral cachet of
rescuing a child in need. In the progressive, cultured environment in which the
Basterra Porto family moved, they could expect nothing but praise. Porto, who
inherited her father’s role as honorary consul, even appeared on local
television to share her wisdom and experience about adopting.
Psychologists’ reports
painted a positive picture of the couple. Porto was “friendly, relaxed,
emotionally expressive, cooperative, adaptable and solicitous,” they said. “I
am a passionate woman,” she told them, describing her husband as “patient,
easy-going, understanding and with a sense of humour, a strong character who makes
his own decisions.” The Porto family, one of their friends told me, were
“aristocracy”.
In China, an
underweight, undersized nine-month-old baby girl from Hunan province called
Asunta Fong Yang awaited them. It was, Basterra would recall, “an incredible
trip”. Two weeks later, after navigating the Chinese red tape and making the
required payments, they brought the little girl home to Santiago. Her new
Spanish identity documents showed that she was now Asunta Fong Yang Basterra
Porto.
The child grew and
began to gain weight, though she remained slight and suffered the routine
ailments of childhood: fevers, gastroenteritis and other illnesses that scare
parents but pass quickly. In the circles in which Porto – “Charo” to friends
and family – moved, friendly doctors were always on hand. There was no need to
go to the public health centre, where a paediatrician had been assigned to
Asunta. They went, instead, to the city’s major hospital, where a friendly
consultant would oversee future care. Even prescription-only medicines could be
obtained from friendly pharmacists. It was a privilege of class, but this was
how things worked in Santiago – a charming, tranquil city that functions as the
capital of the increasingly self-governing region of Galicia. “Like other
provincial cities, Santiago can be very complacent,” the Galician writer Miguel
Anxo Murado told me. The couple were happy to use their contacts. They were
simply doing their best for Asunta.
Over time it became
apparent that Asunta was special. By the time she reached secondary school she
was deemed so bright that she skipped an academic year. Her parents both pushed
her and fretted about her abilities. “Well-handled, they are a good thing,” Porto
told friends after reading up on gifted children. “But they can be a problem.”
There were private classes in English, French and Chinese, plus German at
school. Asunta already spoke Spanish and Galician, the Portuguese-tinged
language of this green, damp corner of Atlantic Spain. There were also private
classes in ballet, violin and piano – often demanded by Asunta herself.
“She once told us what
her Saturdays were like,” Asunta’s ballet teacher, an English woman named Gail
Brevitt, recalled. “She got up at 7am, did Chinese from 8 until 10, came to
ballet from 10.15 to 12.30, then did French until lunchtime. And then there was
violin and piano.” Asunta’s proud parents followed her progress carefully. The
girl was timid with strangers, but exuberant at home – playing practical jokes,
haranguing her parents with mock political speeches or flouncing around in her
ballet costumes. There were concerts and theatre trips, while her mother became
involved in the Ateneo, a liberal cultural club that arranged talks, debates
and concerts.
By the time she turned
12 in September 2012, Asunta might have been expected to be getting fed up with
being, to all appearances, a project child – someone who was determinedly being
shaped into a prodigy. Once, when her mother was going through a list of
after-school activities in front of acquaintances, the girl snapped: “That’s
one that I’m doing because you like it!” But mostly Asunta seemed happy. She
was talented, disciplined and enjoyed what she did. She was also reserved,
sharing her few concerns with Carmen González, the family’s cleaner and nanny,
or with her elderly but active godmother, María Isabel Veliz. She was now five
inches taller than Porto, and on the verge of womanhood. “To me they seemed an
idyllic family,” said González.
But the family had
started to show some cracks. In 2009, Porto spent two nights in a private
psychiatric hospital, saying she felt suicidal, apathetic and guilty. Her mind
was a high-speed whirl, she said, and she felt in competition with her own
mother. “She gets very irritable with her daughter, who is a bother,” a
psychiatrist wrote in her notes. After two days, however, Porto discharged
herself and only returned for one of the regular checkups that had been
scheduled for her.
Two years later, in
2011, Porto had recovered her balance and began to think about sending her
daughter away to school in England for a year. This would allow her to polish
her English and help ensure that Asunta lived up to her natural brilliance.
Porto had done something similar, spending a year at school in Oxford as a
teenager and, as a 22-year-old student, travelling to France as an Erasmus exchange
student. She had lasted only a few months in France. “Nobody knew who I was.
Here in Santiago, as my father was a faculty teacher, they treated me with
greater consideration,” she explained later. Her self-esteem was brittle, and
it was during her time in France that a cycle of occasional tailspins into
acute anxiety or depression had started. Porto began working in her father’s
law practice after graduating and later posted a CV online in which she claimed
to have completed her Erasmus year and studied at the London High School of
Law, an institution that does not exist.
In September 2013, aged
12, Asunta started back at school after a long summer holiday that included
several happy weeks with her nanny in her home village and with her godmother at
a local beach resort, swimming in the sea and going to local fiestas. “She had
a wonderful time,” said Veliz. Her parents were nearby in Santiago or at their
own beach apartment, but spent only a week of that six-week period with Asunta.
They were recovering from an emotionally draining 18 months. This black period
had started with the deaths of Porto’s mother and, seven months later, her
father. Both had died in their beds. Asunta had spent lots of time with her
grandparents, strolling through the city’s Alameda park with her grandfather,
who would walk her home from ballet class. Her maternal grandmother had been
the family’s driving force. She had “a personality like a lawnmower”, said one
acquaintance. Porto called her “charmingly awful”.
The losses exposed the
faultlines in Porto’s marriage. Early in 2013, she and Basterra had suddenly
divorced, much to the surprise of their friends. In fact, Porto’s enthusiasm
for a man she saw as excessively puritan, antisocial, apathetic and unpredictable
had run out long before. She admitted to a friend that she had tired of her
underachieving “house-husband”. Porto had taken a lover – a self-assured,
energetic and successful businessman called Manuel García. When Basterra
discovered the affair, after rummaging through his wife’s emails, the marriage
crumbled. He moved away, staying with relatives in the Basque country, but
returned three weeks later, taking a tiny apartment around the corner. His only
aim, he said, was to see Asunta grow up happy.
Porto had sat Asunta
down and given her the divorced parents’ talk, full of reassurances that her
parents adored her but that mummy and daddy no longer loved each other. “So who
will cook?” Asunta wanted to know. It was a pertinent question. Her father, whose
freelance work was erratic, had been chef and chief housekeeper. Basterra
bombarded his ex-wife with emails reminding her of all the household tasks that
would now fall on her, knowing that her inability to organise herself would
make her anxious. “I doubt if she has ever even boiled an egg,” said one
friend. Without Porto’s money, Basterra had come down in the world. His wife’s
choice of lover – García, who was still married and who Basterra regarded as
vulgar – only added to his sense of resentment.
No one knows how
Asunta, entering adolescence, reacted to all this. The perfect certainties of
her world were being dismantled, and her trust in her parents must have been
shaken.
Alfonso Basterra and Rosario Porto suddenly
divorced in 2013, much to the surprise of their friends.
In June 2013, Porto had
a nervous breakdown that provoked acute physical symptoms, including dizziness
and the seizing up of one side of her face. Basterra rushed to his ex-wife’s
hospital bed and, a week later, helped to set her up again at home. In some
ways, it was a return to their old life. They had meals at his place and he
even thought they might move back in together.
Meanwhile, Asunta
carried on with her many extra activities. When she laid her study books out in
a fan shape across the colourful rug on her bedroom floor on the afternoon of
Saturday 21 September 2013 – after she and her mother had eaten lunch at her father’s
flat, followed by a game of cards and an episode of The Simpsons – it seemed
that the family had overcome its recent traumas and that Asunta’s life was
firmly back on course.
Alfredo Balsa is
well-known to police in and around Santiago de Compostela. An assiduous visitor
of clubes de alterne – the legal, neon-lit bar-brothels that sit on the edges
of every Spanish town – he had the habit of driving around drunk in his home
parish of Teo, a sprawl of villages outside Santiago. By September 2013 he had
been caught so often that his driving licence had been taken away, but the
nearest club de alterne – the Satay – was only a mile away, down
well-maintained dirt tracks, and the chances of being caught driving there were
almost non-existent.
In the early hours of
22 September, he and a friend rolled out of a bar in the village of Feros, got
into Balsa’s white Volkswagen Golf, and drove down the broad track to the back
of the Satay. It was a remarkably bright night, but the oak and pine trees cast
deep, black shadows, and it was among these that Balsa glimpsed something
strange. It looked like a scarecrow. He stopped the car, reversed, pointed the
headlights towards the spot and, sure enough, a human shape lay stretched out
on a gently-sloping bank just two metres from the track.
They got out of the car
and stepped cautiously towards it. A girl lay on the bed of fallen pine
needles, dressed in mud-stained grey sweatpants, with one arm half-inside a
matching top and a white T-shirt pulled above her stomach. She was barefoot.
The girl’s left arm was curled up to her shoulder, a large wet stain ran around
her crotch, and there was a small amount of blood-tinged mucus under her nose.
It was a shocking find, made stranger in this quiet country area because the
girl was Asian. The men felt for a pulse, but there was none.
Police knew immediately
who the victim was. Rosario Porto and Alfonso Basterra had appeared at the main
Santiago police station, a honey-coloured stone building in a manicured barrio
near the cathedral, at 10.17pm that night to report that Asunta had gone
missing. The police record noted that Asunta had been left at her mother’s
apartment doing her homework at 7pm while Porto went to the family’s country
house – a walled retreat built by her parents, with a swimming pool and tennis
court. The house was also in Teo parish, 20 minutes from Santiago and some four
kilometres from where the body was found. When Porto returned at 9.30pm the
girl had disappeared.
Asunta was a disciplined,
obedient child – not the sort to wander off – so her mother had rung Basterra
and they had waited a few minutes to see if she was walking from one parent’s
apartment to the other. They told the duty police inspector, Javier Vilacoba,
that they had called a few of Asunta’s friends, but nobody had heard from her
since Porto had gone to the country house. Just before they left the police
station, Basterra reminded Porto to tell Vilacoba about a strange incident from
earlier in the summer. At 2am on a July night, she said, she had been woken by
Asunta screaming. When she rushed to the girl’s room she found a man dressed in
black with latex gloves, bending over the child. As the man ran out, he pushed
past Porto and bruised her cheek. They had left the keys in the outside lock of
the apartment by mistake, though Porto did not know how the man – who she
assumed knew about a safe box containing thousands of euros in cash – had
entered the building.
Rosario Porto had consulted
police at the time but decided not to make a formal report of the incident.
Break-ins were rarely solved, she reasoned, and nothing was missing. “Asunta
was a fearful girl. I did not want her to feel unsafe in her own home,” Porto
said. It was an odd explanation, made stranger by the fact that she did not
inform her neighbours. But witnesses noticed Porto’s bruised face and the fact
that something very frightening had obviously happened. “Today someone tried to
kill me!” Asunta texted to a friend. Two months later, it seemed, someone had
succeeded.
Inspector Vilacoba gave
Asunta’s parents the news at 4.45am. He and Basterra had smoked a cigarette
together outside the apartment building in the warm night air a few hours
earlier. Basterra had muttered that Asunta must be dead and that he hoped she
had not been raped.
The next two days were
a blur of police interrogations, pain and pills. Porto’s parents had both been
cremated and on 24 September, for the third time in 18 months, she was back in
the crematorium. Wakes are public affairs in Spain and the crematorium was
packed. Porto and her ex-husband took mobile phone photographs of the closed
white coffin – which had been displayed behind a glass screen, surrounded by
large wreaths of white roses and lilies – before it went into the incinerator.
News reporters gathered
outside. A veteran local television journalist, Tareixa Navaza, stepped forward
as the family’s spokeswoman and when someone suggested that the parents were
under investigation, she reacted angrily. She knew the family, she said, and
would walk through fire to prove her belief in Porto’s innocence. While
Basterra wept, a man approached Porto. He whispered something into her ear and
they walked off together. It took a while for anyone to notice her absence.
Soon news came through
from Spain’s Civil Guard police, which investigates crimes committed in rural
areas. Porto had been arrested at the funeral. To anyone who knew her, the idea
that Rosario Porto might kill her own daughter was ridiculous. “I just don’t
understand. I never saw Charo mistreat Asunta in any way,” a neighbour, Olga
Fachal, told me.
Not everyone agreed. An
energetic and controversial investigating magistrate named José Antonio Vázquez
Taín, who sometimes writes novels based on his cases, was detailed to oversee
the investigation. It was the maverick Taín – famous for bounding out of his
office in jeans and T-shirts to greet visitors – who had ordered the arrest.
Even though there was
no physical evidence, such as fingerprints or fibres, to link Porto to the
girl’s corpse, the police had sound reasons for arresting her. The most
compelling evidence came from a CCTV camera at a petrol station near her
apartment. The footage showed Porto driving the family’s old, green Mercedes
Benz on a route that led towards their country house. A long-haired girl sat
beside her. The timecode revealed that the footage had been taken at a time
when, according to Porto’s versions of events, Asunta was meant to be at home.
When shown the video,
Porto admitted that the passenger was her daughter, blaming nerves, pills and
shame at the girl’s death for blurring her memory. They had briefly gone to the
country house in Teo, she explained, but Asunta felt ill and had insisted on
being taken home. She had dropped her off near the apartment in Santiago. Porto
claimed to have then spent most of the evening driving around on errands that,
because of her scattiness, she failed to complete.
Porto’s behaviour had
already seemed suspicious. When police had taken her to the country house hours
after the body was found, she had rushed towards a room that contained a
wastepaper basket with snippets of orange baler twine inside. The twine was
similar to some found next to the body, which, investigators concluded, must have
been used to tie Asunta’s limbs together. A roll of the same kind of twine –
which is common in rural areas – was discovered in a storeroom, but forensic
scientists were unable to say if the bits found by the corpse came from that
particular roll.
If Porto had murdered
Asunta, it seemed likely that she must have had an accomplice. At barely 4ft
8in tall, Porto would have had trouble lifting Asunta’s corpse and laying it
neatly by the roadside without leaving drag marks. So, the day after Porto was
arrested, Judge Taín ordered the arrest of Basterra.
The public was
understandably shocked. Santiago is a small city, a place where anonymity is
impossible and appearances count. Porto and her husband were a popular,
considerate couple. She had made a point of hiding her problems behind a cheery
disposition. She was intense and absent-minded, but not at all snobbish and
given to sudden, unsolicited generosity. When Asunta grew out of her clothes,
her mother rang around friends with smaller daughters. “They wouldn’t just
offer the clothes, they would package them up and bring them round,” said
Demetrio Peláez, a journalist who worked with Basterra at El Correo, the local
newspaper, in the late 1980s. Karen Duncan-Barlow, a university lecturer who
gave English classes to Porto as a teenager, found herself spontaneously
invited round for Christmas dinners after running into her decades later.
Basterra specialised in
travel journalism, but made no mark on the city’s media. He attempted to build
a career in radio but his speaking voice was notoriously dull. “He was like a
dead mosquito,” said another person who worked with him. When he was first
courting Porto, Basterra irritated his fellow journalists at El Correo by
abandoning half-written news items in order to make sure he was at the theatre
or concert hall on time. There was also envy at his lifestyle. “We couldn’t
afford to go to the Caribbean,” said one.
Basterra’s family came
from the Basque city of Bilbao and had been well-off before his father
frittered away the money. He, nevertheless, clung onto the importance of class
and gentlemanly conduct as part of what he called “the honour of the
Basterras”. Those who knew the couple well were aware that Porto could be
capricious and demanding and some saw Basterra as a mousy, dominated man. But
he also had haughty, disdainful side, with what Duncan-Barlow called a
condescending attitude to his “little woman”. On various occasions Basterra had
lashed out and hit Porto, though investigators did not find this out until much
later.
There was very little
physical evidence to implicate Basterra, who claimed to have been alone in his
apartment, cooking or reading a book with his phone turned off, when the murder
happened. His wife, too, said that her phone’s battery had run out, meaning
their movements could not be tracked from data picked up by cellphone towers.
Asunta Basterra had spent the
final night of her life in a bunk bed at her father’s flat after Porto had
called to say she would be late back from an exhibition that was being held out
of town. Her absence was a sign that Basterra’s hopes of a return to normal
family life were fantasy. He had demanded, when offering to care for Porto
after her breakdown, that she ditch her lover García – who had originally hired
her to help with real estate deals in Morocco. She had agreed, but secretly took
up with him again on the day before the murder, sailing off in his boat for an
afternoon of lovemaking.
In addition to the CCTV
footage, there was one more reason to suspect the couple. Forensic scientists
had tested Asunta’s blood and urine, revealing highly toxic levels of lorazepam
– the main active ingredient in the Orfidal pills that Porto had long used to
calm anxiety attacks. Initial results suggested that Asunta had been drugged
and then smothered.
Teachers at two music
academies recalled that in the months before her death, Asunta had sometimes
been dopey and stumbling, unable to read her sheet music or even walk straight.
“I took some white powders,” she told Isabel Bello, who ran one of the
academies. “I don’t know what they are giving me. No one tells me the truth,”
she complained to a violin teacher. Unusually, on the Wednesday before her
death, Asunta had also missed school. Porto wrote a note explaining that she
had reacted badly to some medicine.
Forensic scientists
tested a strand of Asunta’s hair and discovered the presence of lorazepam along
the first three centimetres. Since hair grows at about a centimetre a month,
they concluded that she had also been ingesting smaller doses of the drug for
three months. This matched the stories told by her teachers.
Investigators began to
develop their theory. Asunta’s adopted parents, they decided, had grown tired
of the girl they had “bought” a decade earlier. The killing had been a
carefully planned attempt to rid themselves of an increasingly bothersome
pre-adolescent child. The plot had included experimental dosing of the girl
with Orfidal, careful disabling of their mobile phones, and an arrogant belief
that they would be able to convince people that Asunta had been abducted and
murdered. Porto was the driving force behind the crime, they suspected, and had
been unhinged by the recent deaths of her parents. A psychologist who had
treated her in the weeks before the murder said that she had felt “overwhelmed”
by Asunta.
They are two of the
most selfish people I've met. She's a spoilt child. He thinks he's superior to
the rest of the world
Immediately after his
arrest, Basterra was put in a police cell next to his wife, separated by a
flimsy partition through which they could speak – and be secretly recorded on
video. The police amassed hours of tape but at no point in the recorded
conversations was there any admission of guilt or any other evidence to use
against Basterra and Porto (a court would also later declare the recordings
inadmissible). “Look what trouble your overheated imagination has got us into,”
was one of several enigmatic phrases used by Porto.
But the tape did reveal
something unexpected. When left alone, Basterra was no longer submissive. “Silence!”
he commanded Porto when it seemed she was talking too much.
“That was a surprise,”
Taín told me. “It seems they took it in turns to be dominant.” Basterra,
investigators decided, was just as likely to be the main instigator. “They are
two of the most selfish people I have met,” one of the interrogators told me.
“She is a spoilt child. He thinks he is superior to the rest of the world.”
For the next two years,
as the police investigation proceeded sluggishly, Spain’s popular tabloid
television shows speculated wildly about guilt, motive and evidence, while
spreading unsubstantiated rumours that Basterra was a paedophile or that Porto
had murdered her parents. Details of the police investigation were leaked and
rumours circulated freely. Everybody seemed to have an opinion about the guilt
or innocence of Porto and Basterra, yet nobody could explain such an apparently
motiveless crime.
Cases in which children
are murdered by adoptive parents are exceedingly rare. In the few instances
where parents kill children, the crime is typically the result of a moment of
rage or overpowering feelings of inadequacy. Obedient and gifted, Asunta did
not fit the profile of a victim of this kind of crime. Nor did her parents fit
the profile of child-murderers. Porto may have suffered depression and anxiety
attacks, but those do not turn mothers into killers.
It was not until 1
October 2015 that the prosecution finally laid out its case before a jury, in
the anodyne surroundings of Santiago’s smartest courtroom. Two years of prison
had taken their toll on Porto and Basterra, who had suffered the taunts and
insults that prisoners reserve for child abusers. Porto had spent much of her
jail time in a weepy, pharmaceutical daze. Basterra, now almost fully bald and
white-bearded, had developed a fierce hatred of Taín and the police
investigators. In court, he was openly confrontational, maintaining an
indignant and occasionally sneering attitude during questioning and mouthing
silent expletives – his dark eyebrows bouncing up over thick-rimmed glasses –
when upset. Porto was confused and tearful, with sudden moments of coherence
and a determination to persuade the jury that her memory lapses were part of
wider nervous troubles. Both wore black.
Over the next month,
through long sessions that started at 10am and sometimes lasted until evening,
a jury of nine men and women listened to the evidence, although – like most
Spaniards – they had probably already heard or read vast amounts about the
case. Other than the music and ballet teachers who had seen Asunta dazed or
upset, all the witnesses described Porto and Basterra as model parents. “To me
they were always a perfect family,” said González, the nanny.
Porto may have suffered
depression and anxiety attacks, but those do not turn mothers into killers
Prosecutors continued
to insist that the pair had spent months devising a cold-blooded conspiracy to
eliminate their own daughter – though they eventually downgraded the charges
against Basterra, depicting him as an accomplice to his ex-wife’s murder plot.
Porto was still unable to explain her initial lies about her movements on the
day of Asunta’s death. The weak spot in Basterra’s defence, apart from the violence
towards his wife, (described in a perfunctory manner during the trial by his
ex-wife, who insisted he had been a marvellous father) was the Orfidal. During
the trial it was revealed that he had obtained at least 175 pills over 10 weeks
– some legally with his wife’s prescription, others without a prescription, and
still more with a prescription he obtained after lying to his own doctor.
Porto, however, insisted that she had only used them occasionally. Asunta, the
jury was told, had somehow been made to swallow at least 27 ground-up pills –
nine times as powerful as a strong adult dose – on the day she died. Neither
parent could explain how or why, and both claimed that they had only given her
pills to treat hayfever on the days she appeared dizzy.
After three and a half
days of deliberation, the jury produced a verdict that was even harsher than
that sought by the prosecutor. They accepted the evidence of a 15-year-old
acquaintance of Asunta who claimed to have seen her in the street with Basterra
on the day of the crime when he was meant to be alone at home. Basterra, their
spokesman said, may have hidden in the back seat of the car when Asunta was
driven to the country house. She had been smothered there, then dumped at the
country track. The judge handed Basterra and Porto 18-year sentences, as the
crime was committed before a new law introduced life sentences for
child-murderers. Both have appealed to have their convictions overturned.
The guilty verdict
threw up a fresh set of unanswerable questions. Investigators can only guess at
why the couple decided to adopt. Basterra had never wanted children, according
to Porto. Pressure from her parents was part of it. “I think they wanted to
project the stereotype of a happy family,” said one investigator, who saw both
as arrogant and selfish. “If she wants something, she thinks she can just buy
it. And if she doesn’t want it, she gets rid of it. He helps her to satisfy her
whims. But when she is dependent, he becomes violent.” It is impossible to say
whether, if true, any of this might have been spotted earlier. Court-appointed
psychologists who interviewed Porto after the crime (Basterra refused to be
profiled by them) deemed her narcissistic and depressive, but capable of
distinguishing between right and wrong.
It is understandable
that those who assessed their suitability as adoptive parents never imagined
Porto and Basterra turning into child-murderers. But the guilty verdict ought
to have provoked some soul-searching. It is now clear that Porto’s psychiatric
problems began well before the adoption, but they were either kept secret by
Porto or discounted by the psychologists who assessed her adoption application.
Officials from the regional government of Galicia repeatedly refused to say whether
they had carried out an internal enquiry or revised procedures in light of
Asunta’s death.
According to adoptive
parents of other Chinese children in the region, the selection process for
parents in Galicia wanting to adopt is now exhaustive. China has since
tightened its adoption rules and far fewer girls like Asunta are leaving the
country. In fact, across the world, international adoptions have fallen to
below half their 2004 peak of 45,288, reflecting concerns about both
trafficking and the new levels of protection offered by host countries. Events
as shocking as the murder of Asunta Fong Yang remain, thankfully, few and far
between.
A 12-year-old child has
had few opportunities to leave a lasting mark on the world. On death, almost
everything disappears. Asunta Fong Yang is no exception. Only a few things now
remain. One is a blog she used to practise her written English, where she
showed a taste for murder mysteries. “Once upon a time there was a happy
family; a man, a woman and a son,” starts one. “One day the woman was
assesinated (sic).”
The site where Asunta’s
corpse was found has become a small shrine, populated by slowly disintegrating
cuddly toys, candles, plastic flowers and the occasional fresh bunch of
chrysanthemums. “You showed no compassion, no feelings, no heart,” reads a
rough, hand-painted sign, chastising her parents. Her ashes also remain. After
the arrests, the crematorium’s manager had to ask Taín what he should do with
them. They were eventually given to a friend of Rosario Porto. It will be up to
her adoptive parents – also now her convicted murderers – to decide what
happens to them.
Este caso demuestra que el poder económico y político, evidenciado de hecho en lo social, a través del entramado mediático, insiste en continuar atenuando los malos tratos, crímenes y delitos de toda índole perpetrados en el ámbito familiar. Asimismo, revela el machismo imperante, dado que la convivencia, suele considerarse un factor atenuante en los crímenes precedidos de violencia doméstica.
ResponderEliminarMost of crimes follows perpetrating in the family setting, but when the relationships aren't between Kinsmen, the case doesn't become in mediatics event. It does not subject of the jorurnalism. Why? Because the economic and politic power are interested in this way to attenuate sentences and responsabilities. In the same way we attend the violence sexist. In these cases the penalty is not aggravated.
If you don't mind... I'm a teacher but I'm also a journalist. I'm desperated. I'm a victim, too.
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