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Carmala Bousada with his twin boys.
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Carmela Bousada, a 67-year-old Spanish single woman who is believed to be the world's oldest new mother told a British newspaper she lied to a U.S. fertility clinic - saying she was 55 - to get treatment.
Carmela said in her first interview since she gave birth to twin boys on Dec. 29 that she sold her house in Spain to raise $59,000 to pay for in-vitro fertilization at a California clinic, the News of the World reported.
"I think everyone should become a mother at the right time for them," Bousada said.
"Often circumstances often put you between a rock and a hard place and maybe things shouldn't have been done in the way they were done but that was the only way to achieve the thing I had always dreamed of and I did it," she said.
Bousada turned 67 this month but said she told the Pacific Fertility Center in Los Angeles she was 55 - the clinic's cut off for treating single women, the report said. She said the clinic did not ask her for identification1.
Dr. Vicken Sahakian, the clinic's medical director, confirmed late Saturday that he treated Bousada, but said clinic procedures should have required her to provide her passport.
Bousada now hopes to find a younger husband to help raise her two sons, Pau and Christian2, the newspaper said.
"I would have loved to have got pregnant3 with a man by my side but it didn't work out that way. Now I've got to look for a dad for the kids. I'd like to meet someone a bit younger than me. They'd have to like the children, of course." Bousada said.
The retired4 department store employee lived with her elderly mother for her entire life in Cadiz, in southern Spain. She hatched5 her plan to have children after her mother died in 2005, the newspaper said.
The previous holder6 of the oldest new mother record was Romanian citizen Adriana Iliescu, who gave birth to baby girl in January 2005 also at the age of 66. Bousada was 130 days older than Iliescu when she gave birth.
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