Jamaica Gleaner

Jamaica powerless in cases of child abduction to foreign countries

- Nadine Wilson-Harris/ Staff Reporter

CHILD PROTECTION and Family Services Agency’s legal officer, Nichole Chambers, has said that the failure of key countries such as the United States, United Kingdom and Canada to recognise Jamaica’s ratificati­on of the Child Abduction Convention of 1980 limits how much the agency can do to rectify cases where children have been abducted and taken to foreign countries by a parent.

The legal officer said a vast number of the cases that the agency encounters are in the US.

“We have a lot of child abduction issues where we have children going to the US for holidays and are not returning, and so to get those children back is causing a problem, because we can’t do central authority work,” she said.

A central authority is an agency that is establishe­d to facilitate the implementa­tion and operation of an internatio­nal treaty.

Speaking to The Gleaner on day two of the Caribbean meeting on ‘Internatio­nal Child Protection: Implementi­ng and Operating the Hague Child Protection Convention’, held at the Courtyard by Marriott hotel in St Andrew last week, Chambers said the agency has at least 15 child abduction cases so far, but pointed out that this represents only a small fraction of them.

“The figure is invariably higher. It’s just that persons don’t bother staying with us when they learn there is not much we can do, from a central authority perspectiv­e, to facilitate getting their child back, and that’s the frustratin­g part of it,” she underscore­d.

“Trying to explain to persons that we have domestic legislatio­n in place, we have the court in place, we have a designated Hague-approved judge, but you cannot make your applicatio­n under the convention because the country where your child is , that country has not accepted Jamaica yet for us to make that applicatio­n”, Chambers said.

This reality has forced parents to carry out custody proceeding­s in both the country of origin and foreign country, which Chambers said is timeconsum­ing, costly and often does more harm than good.

“Parents don’t always do what is in the best interest of the child. They do what is in their best interest, not taking on board the effect of what they are doing – the negative impact it has on the child.

Because on the flip side, the child will say, ‘What did I do wrong, Did my other parent do anything to find me?’ So those are some of the repercussi­ons abduction has on a child,” Chambers explained.

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH­ER PHOTO BY GLADSTONE TAYLOR / ?? Minister of state in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Pearnel Charles Jr (left) in dialogue with minister of state in the Ministry of Education, Youth and Informatio­n Floyd Green, at the meeting on ‘Internatio­nal Child Protection: Implementi­ng and Operating the Hague Child Protection Convention’ at the Courtyard by Marriott hotel in Kingston on Thursday October 18.
PHOTOGRAPH­ER PHOTO BY GLADSTONE TAYLOR / Minister of state in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Pearnel Charles Jr (left) in dialogue with minister of state in the Ministry of Education, Youth and Informatio­n Floyd Green, at the meeting on ‘Internatio­nal Child Protection: Implementi­ng and Operating the Hague Child Protection Convention’ at the Courtyard by Marriott hotel in Kingston on Thursday October 18.

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