MEPs back steps to ease foreign child maintenance

Published: 19 February 2010 y., Friday

Tėtis su vaikais
The pain of divorce and separation is all too often accompanied by financial and emotional hardship when one parent lives abroad and refuses to provide financial help. With the number of couples of different nationalities increasing the issue of retrieving child maintenance will grow. MEPs agreed 11 February that the EU should ratify an international convention that could make the recovery of maintenance across borders easier.

MEPs backed a report by Jiří Maštálka, a Czech member of the leftist GUE/NGL bloc. He said the "Convention on the International Recovery of Child Support and Other Forms of Family Maintenance" (which forms part of the Hague Convention) is the best way to establish clear legal rules on recovery of maintenance..

"Allows the international recovery of child support"

"The main contribution of this Convention lies in the fact that it now allows the international recovery of child support and other forms of family maintenance in relation to third countries. It brings a solution at the multilateral level, which previously did not exist," Mr Maštálka said.

British Liberal Diana Wallis, who drafted a report on the recuperation of child support last year, said that she has often been contacted by constituents having difficulties getting maintenance payments from somebody in a different country and that "all too often, I have been unable to give a practical and positive answer".

Will add "practical value"

Ms Wallis said, this report will "add practical value at difficult times in people's lives".

Some member states are known to be reluctant to go down this legal route as they would prefer to keep family law on a national level. Family law is different across the 27 member states - for example divorce is not recognised in Malta.

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

Churches feel the economic pain

A famous New York church is feeling Wall Street's pain. more »

Tokyo: Michelin's star city

Japan may be in recession, but Tokyo remains the world's best dining city. more »

Holland gets tough on cannabis

The Netherlands may be famous for its liberal drugs laws but in the Dutch town of Bergen Op Zoom they've had enough. more »

Free movement of workers is good for Europe's economy

A European Commission report published today shows that mobile workers from the countries that joined the EU in 2004 and 2007 have had a positive impact on Member States' economies and have not led to serious disturbances on their labour markets. more »

Citizen spycam in Seoul

South Korean stores must by law charge shoppers for plastic bags. Any infrigement would be reported to the authorities. more »

China's queen of plastic surgery

Shi Sanba is one of China's most celebrated plastic surgeon's and also dubbed the country's "Michael Jackson". more »

Q & A on Parliamentary immunity

The job of elected Members of any Parliament is to make laws that all of us are obliged to obey. more »

Thousands queue for cut-price housing

In Spain thousands have been queuing for days in the hope of gaining that crucial first step onto the property ladder. more »

French farmers flock to Paris

Scores of sheep have been shepherded through Paris as part of a demonstration to improve the lives of European farmers. more »

Stop abuse in zoos, says ENDCAP

Animal rights groups say animals are suffering from abuse and sometimes live in dire conditions. more »