publication date: Aug 22, 2009
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author/source: Georgina Vallance-Webb
Holidays can be an
emotive issue for parents with broken relationships. Where lines of communication are
strained, the need to ask the estranged
parent's permission to take the child for a
day trip to Calais, to a
villa holiday in Spain or a
family wedding in Hawaii, is not always appreciated.
In families with
international connections, one parent may be
anxious that the other parent is planning to
steal away with the child permanently.
Parental consent to holiday plans may be
withheld out of a desire to
create obstacles and frustration. In that case, the
holidaying parent will have no option but to make an
application to the court. The
courts have proved themselves
practical and robust in devising
protective orders to put the remaining
parent's mind at rest.
Child abductionChild abduction is the
removal or retention of a child across an
international border by one parent
without the
consent of the other parent or in
contravention of a court order. If the
travelling parent absconds to a country that is not a signatory to
The Hague Convention there may be no remedy for the abandoned parent to secure the child's return.
Protective ordersIn one case a
six year-old girl lived in England. Her mother was English and the father
Egyptian. The court said that
contact with the
father in Cairo was in the child's
interests so that she could see her
Egyptian heritage, and maintain relations with her
paternal family. However, first the father must enter into an
agreement in Egypt
confirming that the child would
leave Egypt after contact in that country and the father would place
no obstacle in the way.
The
court went further in the case of a little boy who was three years old and had spent his life in
England. The mother wished to take the child to the
United Arab Emirates to visit her family. As a
precondition the mother was ordered to
deposit the sum of £50,000 with the court by way of a
security bond, to provide the father with
copy travel tickets, full details of the
travel itinerary and to give solemn declarations on the Koran granting the
safe return of the child.
When
going abroad it's not just the air tickets and
passports that need to be remembered;
both parents must be in
agreement with the proposed
travel plans or a court application may be required.
Georgina Vallance-Webb, Associate at Stevens & Bolton LLP, matrimonial department
Contact: georgina.vallance-webb@stevens-bolton.co.uk or call 01483 734211