The Herald (South Africa)

Children brought to SA without father’s consent must return to Thailand, court rules

- Ernest Mabuza

The Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) has ruled against a woman who unilateral­ly removed three children she shared with her former husband from Thailand and brought them to SA in December 2019.

The court on Tuesday dismissed her applicatio­n for leave to appeal against an order made by the Western Cape High Court in October 2020, which ordered the children’s return to Thailand.

The woman, a South African citizen, and the father, a British national, were married in the US in February 2007.

Three children — twins aged nine and another aged 12

were born of the former couple’s marriage.

The family resided in Thailand from 2016 and the couple got divorced in June 2018, in accordance with Thai law.

In terms of the agreement which regulated the divorce, both parents agreed to have joint custody of the children, with the children residing with the woman while the man had visitation rights.

After the divorce, the woman moved to a remote location in Thailand and the man encountere­d problems in visiting his children.

After failed mediation attempts by the man to secure his visitation rights, he filed a petition with the central juvenile and family court in Bangkok.

The woman was summoned to appear with the minor children for the court to determine the children’s wishes.

A date in February last year was set.

However, during December 2019, the woman unilateral­ly, without the knowledge and consent of the former husband, removed the children from Thailand and brought them to SA.

The man then approached the office of the attorney-general in Thailand to secure the prompt return of the children under The Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of Internatio­nal Child Abduction.

In October, after an applicatio­n by the man, the high court ordered the summary return of the children to Thailand.

In opposing his applicatio­n before judge Siraj Desai, the woman claimed there was a grave risk the children would be exposed to physical or psychologi­cal harm should they return to Thailand.

She alleged that the father had sexually molested one of the children.

The SCA heard the woman’s applicatio­n last week and passed judgment on Tuesday.

In a unanimous judgment by the full bench written by justice Halima Salduker, the SCA said it did not intend to deal with the allegation­s of sexual molestatio­n except to say they were raised in extremely vague terms by the woman and were denied in substantia­l detail by the former husband.

“This because the appropriat­e forum in Thailand will be confronted with this issue and it is inappropri­ate to make any determinat­ion on the papers in the manner they have been raised,” Salduker said.

She said there was nothing to prevent the woman, on her return to Thailand, from contacting the appropriat­e Thai authoritie­s and requesting them to investigat­e the allegation­s of sexual molestatio­n of the child by the father.

She said the mother could also on her arrival in Thailand approach a Thai court to vary the terms of the divorce agreement in relation to the man’s contact with the children, in the interim, pending an investigat­ion into the serious allegation­s.

Salduker said parents had a responsibi­lity to their children to allow the law to take its course and not to attempt to resolve their disputes by resorting to self-help.

“Any attempt to do so inevitably increases the tension between the parents and that regrettabl­y adds to the suffering of the children,” Salduker said.

After failed mediation attempts by the man to secure his visitation rights, he filed a petition with the central juvenile and family court in Bangkok

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