Mediator Gebhardt explains how to combat child abduction

Published: 28 January 2009 y., Wednesday

Tėtis su dukryte
The abduction of children by a parent can be deeply distressing for children and adults alike. It can be particularly complicated when the parents live in different countries with differing legal systems. German Socialist Evelyne Gebhardt is the European Parliament's Mediator for International Parental Child Abduction. We spoke to her about what the role entails.

Q. When and how did the European Parliament take the initiative to appoint an international child abduction mediator?
 
On 18 February 1987, Lord Plumb, the President of Parliament, received the so called “five Mothers of Algiers” and a British mother in Strasbourg. The “Mothers of Algiers” were women who had been granted custody of their children by French courts, but whose ex-husbands had used their access rights to abduct the children and had kept them on Algerian territory.
 
For several years the mothers had been campaigning for the right of their children to move freely between the two parents. Strasbourg was one of their stops on a march between Paris and Geneva which they had organised between 10 February and 4 March 1987. The intention was to present a draft recommendation on the free movement of children to the UN Committee on Human Rights in Geneva.
 
On 20 March 1987, the President of the EP appointed a “European mediator for cases involving the cross-frontier abduction of children of marriages between partners of different nationalities”. This appointment also marked the desire of the EP to take practical steps to follow up the visit to Strasbourg by the Mothers of Algiers.
 
Q. What does your role involve?
 
The role of the Mediator is to try to find a voluntary agreement between the abducting parent and the other parent, with the best interests of the child or children always being paramount. As each child has a right to both parents, either parent can request a mediation procedure.
 
The main responsibility of the European Parliament Mediator for International Parental Child Abduction is to assist the parents in finding the best solution for the well-being of their child.
 
Therefore it must be stressed that the Mediator's fundamental duty is to ensure that the best interests of an abducted child are served. In order to save children and parents, as well as other closely involved parties such as grandparents, the emotional strain and disruption arising from legal proceedings, the EP Mediator provides information and advises on the alternative way to settle the dispute, namely mediation.
 
An agreement reached by the parties during a mediation procedure can avoid unnecessary relocation of the child and allows the parents actively and purposefully to address all issues affecting the family. The process is also speedier and less costly than court proceedings. Once understood, accepted and signed by the parties, the agreement can be brought before the courts, which can formalise its terms in a court order that will be recognised and enforceable in other countries.
 
To ensure the effectiveness and professionalism of a mediation session, the EP Child Abduction Mediator helps to put together an appropriate team of mediators for each particular case. The rule which the Mediator tries to follow is to ensure the following combination of mediators: one woman - one man, one lawyer - one non-lawyer (psychologist, sociologist, educationalist, social worker, etc.), both speaking both languages of the parties in the dispute.
 
Q. What help can you give to parents whose children have been abducted?
 
My main responsibility is not to help the parents but to help the children. Even if the mediation session is organised for the parents, it is the child who must benefit from it. We look for the best solutions for the entire family, but especially the child, when we mediate. I emphasise this aspect of the mediation process because often parents argue over their respective rights and neglect the right of the child to have contact with both parents.
 
Q. What problems do you run up against when trying to sort out these complex legal situations? Do you think there is a need for new legislation in this area?
 
The Hague Convention of 25 October 1980 on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction is the most crucial and most comprehensive document at international level.  This Convention seeks to protect children internationally from the harmful effects of their wrongful removal or retention and to establish procedures to ensure their prompt return to the State of their habitual residence. If the States which are signatories to the Convention follow its provisions and its spirit by interpreting it correctly, there are no difficulties.
 
The legislation is good. But it must be applied correctly and other States must be invited to sign up to it. Here I am thinking of the countries of North Africa and the Middle East, which have a culture, a tradition, a mentality and a concept of the position of women and children that are different from our own. Bilateral agreements between countries should be replaced by uniform and global rules to harmonise and improve cooperation in the best interests of children.

Šaltinis: europarl.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Asylum: common standards and higher efficiency

The EU is rewriting its rules on who is entitled to asylum and how countries make that decision. more »

The Integrated Maritime Policy for the EU – priorities for the next Commission

The European Commission presented a Progress Report outlining the achievements of the EU’s Integrated Maritime Policy (IMP) over the past two years and looking out into its future. more »

Stockholm programme laid out to MEPs

The initial scope of an ambitious programme of police, customs, asylum and visa cooperation between the EU's 27 countries was laid out in the Parliament's Civil Liberties Committee Wednesday. more »

UK navy's record cocaine seizure

A British Royal Navy says it made its largest ever seizure of cocaine at a boat used to smuggle drugs off the coast of South America -- five and half tons of the drug, with a street value of 379 million dollars (USD). more »

TV host in murder for ratings case

Brazilian crime television show 'Canal Livre' host right-wing politician Wallace Souza has been accused of of ordering murders and staging crime scenes to boost the popularity of his show. more »

Forest fire damage in 2009 already higher than in 2008

Estimates from the European Forest Fire Information System (EFFIS) show that 200 000 hectares of land in the EU have already burnt in 2009, compared to a total of 180 000 in 2008. more »

Brazil sends trash back to Britain

1,600 tonnes of dirty nappies, used syringes, old TV's and toilet seats makes it's way back to Britain from Brazil. more »

NJ mayors, rabbis ensnared in probe

As part of a two-year federal corruption and money-laundering investigation, two northern New Jersey mayors and other politicians, as well as several rabbis, were rounded up by the FBI and arrested. more »

President Jerzy Buzek calls on Russian authorities to investigate the murder of human rights activist Andrei Kulagin

EP President Jerzy Buzek has expressed his condolences to the family of Andrei Kulagin, the Russian human rights activist who is now known to have been murdered. more »

Doing drug duty

The EU is calling on all Europeans to join in a new anti-drug campaign that lets them decide how to contribute. more »