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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> U (Children) [2014] EWHC 4535 (Fam) (11 November 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2014/4535.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 4535 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
1 Bridge Street West Manchester M60 9DJ |
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B e f o r e :
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In the matter of: | ||
Re: U (Children) |
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Apple Transcription Limited
Suite 204, Kingfisher Business Centre, Burnley Road, Rawtenstall, Lancashire BB4 8ES
DX: 26258 Rawtenstall – Telephone: 0845 604 5642 – Fax: 01706 870838
Counsel for the Respondent Mother: MISS GRUNDY
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE MOSTYN:
Haadiyah Amir U, a girl, who was born on 3rd January 2000, who is therefore nearly 15;
Noor Fatima, a girl, born on 1st February 2001, who is therefore nearly 14; and
Mohammed Asad U, a boy, born on 9th October 2006, who is just 8.
"The applicant's three children have been removed from the jurisdiction of Pakistan by the respondent without his consent and in breach of a Pakistani court order."
It is notable that the relief sought by the father did not extend in the alternative to an order for contact. It sought only what might be described as the nuclear solution of a return of the children to his custody and care in Pakistan.
"The children use strong, intemperate, and forceful language to describe their father and I think that, irrespective of what their experience might have been of him in the past, they are giving a clear and robust indication of where they wish to remain in the future."
He says in paragraph 33:
"I believe the father's application is without merit. He has been totally excluded from the children's lives for the last four years or so, through no fault of his own, perhaps, although the children would argue otherwise. He knows next to nothing about their lives in the UK, although the children and their mother claim he spies on them through a parent with a child who attends the same school. Be that as it may, he is wholly unaware of the extent to which their lives are fruitfully and evidentially embedded in Manchester across a range of developmental indices which indicate to me that their needs are being met here with their mother as a lone parent with no financial help from him.
And at paragraph 34:
The mother has not enabled the children to have a safe relationship with their father, nor would it seem that she has resolved the feelings or perceptions they hold about him. Given their strength of feeling, I am not sure it would be possible and there is insufficient evidence available to me to take a view on the very different accounts of family life in Pakistan offered by the children and their parents."
In paragraph 36, he said:
"The older children describe their father as a 'violent, drunken rascal,' 'a bastard,' and 'ex father,' et cetera. I do not take a view as to whether the children are right about their father and I am aware that he wholly disputes what their mother and, by association, the children say about him. The way things stand at the moment, I do not see how contact can be safely or meaningfully introduced. Even if there were to be a fact-finding about the allegations to provide clarity about future risk, I remain unsure where things would then go, given the ascertainable wishes and feelings of the older children, which are so aligned, virulently and passionately expressed. Logistics and immigration status aside, it is four years too late and I would recommend that the court dismisses the father's application."
"Even if the mother has formed a cabal with the children, I still take the view that it would be unthinkably injurious and harmful to return these children to Pakistan."
"If a child is removed... from Pakistan to the UK without the consent of the parent with a custody/residence order, or a restraint/interdict order from the court of the child's habitual/ordinary residence, the judge of the court of the country to which the child has been removed shall not ordinarily exercise jurisdiction over the child save in so far as it is necessary for the court to order the return of the child to the country of the child's habitual/ordinary residence."
At paragraph 6 it states:
"These applications should be lodged by the applicant, listed by the court and decided expeditiously."
"[It may be refused] if such recognition is manifestly contrary to public policy of the requested State, taking into account the best interests of the child."
"There may come a time when an order of a member state is so stale that coupled with a variety of other powerful factors, a court would have to take a view in the light of welfare considerations as to whether or not that order should be recognised and/or enforced, yet such a court would, in my judgment, remain powerfully constrained in so considering such an order by the necessary consideration of those matters set out in Article 23 of the regulation and would not readily or easily depart from the underlying principles of the regulation."