Rotorua Daily Post

Island seeks custody ruling

Child at centre of tug of love: Mother boarded ship and wrestled girl from grandmothe­r

- Ric Stevens

[The council wants

this dispute to] be resolved using timehonour­ed Tokelauan culture

and custom. Council for the Ongoing Government

of Tokelau

ANew Zealand court has intervened in a custody dispute involving a 4-year-old girl, her parents living in Australia and extended family members in Tokelau.

The court became involved after the girl’s mother, assisted by another relative, boarded a ship at the Tokelauan atoll of Atafu this month, and “wrestled” the child from her paternal grandmothe­r, with whom she had been living.

The crew of the MV Kalopaga had earlier been warned by radio not to get involved in an “incident” which was about to happen on the ship, according to a judgment by New Zealand High Court Justice Matthew Palmer.

Tokelau is a dependent territory of New Zealand in the Pacific Ocean, about 3400km from Auckland.

Justice Palmer heard the case about the girl, whose identity is suppressed, as a High Court of New Zealand judge sitting as the High Court of Tokelau.

He was acting on an urgent applicatio­n made by the island state’s executive body, the Council for the Ongoing Government of Tokelau, for the girl to be made a ward of the court.

Council members said that the applicatio­n was “unpreceden­ted” but they feared that the girl would be taken out of Tokelau.

In submission­s to the court, the council said: “It is the sincere wish of the council that this unfortunat­e family law dispute between the families be resolved using time-honoured Tokelauan culture and custom”.

The child’s birth mother and father are not in a relationsh­ip and live in Australia, where she was born.

After her birth, there was an agreement that the girl’s paternal grandmothe­r would look after the child in Tokelau.

This month, the grandmothe­r and child boarded the cargo ship, Kalopaga, for Samoa, from where it was intended she would fly to Australia with her father to attend a Family Court hearing in New South Wales.

The hearing was scheduled to determine child support, a name change and parenting orders.

On November 5, the Kalopaga stopped at Atafu, where the mother was waiting on another ship, the Mataliki.

Justice Palmer said the evidence before him was that the mother was picked up from the Mataliki by barge and taken to and boarded the Kalopaga, accompanie­d by a male relative.

“After a struggle, the [male relative] wrestled the child away from the grandmothe­r and gave her to the mother, who took her on the barge to Atafu,” he said.

At the time the case was heard, the mother and child, and the grandmothe­r separately, remained in quarantine on Atafu under Tokelau’s continuing strict Covid-19 protocols.

Justice Palmer issued an order making the child a ward of the court.

He gave the island state’s Minister of Education, Elihi Kelihiano Kalolo, authority to make all necessary decisions regarding her guardiansh­ip and care. The judge ordered Kalolo to provide regular written reports on the child within 28 days and every three months after that.

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