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Kate Banerjee
Legal Matters Correspondent
P.ublished 17th August 2024
family

Child Abduction Peaks In Summer: What To Look Out For

Image by Pexels from Pixabay
Image by Pexels from Pixabay
Extensive studies and statistics highlight that cases of child abduction increase during the summer.

The psychological impact on children can be devastating and long-lasting - and it is vital to obtain the permission of everyone with parental responsibility for a child before taking them abroad.

Every year there are around 1,000 cases of British children under the age of sixteen being taken abroad by one parent without the other parent’s permission. This is a criminal offence if the offending parent has not obtained a Court’s permission.

Many cases see children whisked away to countries that are not a signatory of the Hague Convention on International child abduction, an international agreement made in 1980.

Non-signatories of the Hague Convention extend to over sixty countries where there are no international systems to help parents find their children. They include Afghanistan, Egypt, Iraq, Iran, Saudia Arabia, United Arab Emirates and Zimbabwe.

Tell-tale signs

Behavioural changes/deteriorating relationship between parents
Leaving a job
Selling a house
Seeking a copy of a child’s birth certificate
Trying to obtain a child’s passport
Increased contact with family or friends overseas
Wanting to take a child away without the other parent

Preventative steps

Apply to the Court for a Prohibited Steps Order (PSO) preventing either parent from taking their children to events/trips without the express permission of the other parent
Apply for a Child Arrangements Order which clearly sets out the ‘custody rights’ each parent should be exercising. In cases where an abduction occurs, it demonstrates an infringement of custody rights
Ensure that parental contact is supervised or, in extreme cases, stopped altogether
Keep passports safe - an option is for a solicitor to hold them
Ask the Passport Agency to block the other parent from applying for a new passport
In term time, ensure the school know exactly who is allowed to collect your child from school

If you receive a threat of child abduction or if your child has been abducted:

Contact the police immediately. They can issue alerts to airports/ferry terminals and liaise with Interpol who may be able to work with police forces abroad to help find your child
Give the police recent photos of your child and the other parent, together with details of the airport or destination you think they may be heading
Contact Reunite, a UK charity specialising in parental child abduction which operates a 24 hour emergency helpline
Seek legal advice immediately

Guiding you through this complex process

Jones Myers is recognised nationally and internationally for managing cases of parental child abduction.

This includes children being wrongfully removed from England & Wales and unlawfully retained in a different jurisdiction - or being abducted from another jurisdiction to England & Wales and illegally retained.

Our consistently high success rate spans countries both inside and outside of the Hague Convention. We are highly experienced in liaising with the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, the Home Office along with officials, police forces and politicians at the highest level at home and overseas.

Helpful websites include International parental child abduction - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk) and Reunite | International Child Abduction Centre | Child Abduction Charity