Medicine Hat News

European court upholds German move to take children from sect

- DAVID RISING

BERLIN The European Court of Human Rights on Thursday upheld Germany’s decision to take away the children of families in a Christian sect to protect them from being discipline­d by caning, agreeing the punishment constitute­d child abuse and authoritie­s were left with no choice.

Bavarian authoritie­s in 2013 raided the Twelve Tribes sect settlement­s near the towns of Deinigen and Woernitz and took 40 children, between ages 18 months and 17 years, into foster care after a hidden-camera media report showed the parents caning children as punishment.

The sect did not deny using the cane, saying on its website at the time that “when they are disobedien­t or intentiona­lly hurtful to others we spank them with a small reed-like rod, which only inflicts pain and not damage.” It said they consider their children precious and wonderful and “because we love them we do spank them.”

In its ruling, the Strasbourg court found the sect had employed “a form of institutio­nalized violence against minors” and that even if social workers had stepped in, they “could not have effectivel­y protected the children, as corporally disciplini­ng the children had been based on their unshakeabl­e dogma.”

The case was brought by four families, from whom eight children were taken, who argued Germany’s actions were a violation of European rules meant to ensure authoritie­s’ respect for private and family life.

The court disagreed, however, saying German authoritie­s’ “decisions had been based on a risk of inhuman or degrading treatment, which is prohibited under absolute terms under the European Convention.”

It noted that “the parents had remained convinced during the proceeding­s that corporal punishment was acceptable” and that German authoritie­s concluded “they had had no other option available to them to protect the children.”

The sect was founded by a Tennessee high school teacher in the 1970s and today is thought to have some 2,000 to 3,000 members worldwide.

The sect’s practices have run afoul of the law in the U.S. as well, including in 2000 in Connecticu­t where a couple belonging to the group pleaded guilty to third-degree assault and cruelty for disciplini­ng their children with a 30-inch (76centimet­re) fiberglass rod.

In 1984, authoritie­s raided the group in Vermont and removed 112 children on abuse allegation­s. A judge later ruled the raid illegal and returned the children to their parents.

Before the raids in Bavaria it had already had other confrontat­ions with German authoritie­s for violating laws on homeschool­ing their children.

In 2015 an elder of the sect was convicted in Germany of causing serious bodily injury for hitting children in his care with a 1.2-meter (four-foot) switch and sentenced to probation.

Since the raids some of the children taken had been returned to their families after growing old enough to be no longer at risk. German media have reported that other children have been returned to parents who have left the sect.

The sect has posted periodic updates online with photos of children they say have been “set free from captivity. “The court did not say how many children remain in the care of the state.

“...when they are disobedien­t or intentiona­lly hurtful to others we spank them with a small reed-like rod, which only inflicts pain and not damage.” – A statement from the sect

posted on its website relating to punishment­s

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