[2025] EWHC 1344 (Fam)
Family Division of the High Court

[2025] EWHC 1344 (Fam)

Fecha: 02-Jun-2025

A further reason that the bar is set high is due to the fact that otherwise a refusal of a summary return based on an assertion by an abducting parent that they would not accompany a young child on re

73)

A further reason that the bar is set high is due to the fact that otherwise a refusal of a summary return based on an assertion by an abducting parent that they would not accompany a young child on return could open the floodgates for such claims and undermine the entire purpose of the Convention. As Peter Jackson LJ observed in Re R (Child Abduction: Parent’s Refusal to Accompany) at [33] that apprehension was felt in C v C (Minor: Abduction: Rights of Custody) [1989] 1WLR 654 per Butler-Sloss LJ (as she then was) at p661B-E:

The grave risk of harm arises not from the return of the child, but the refusal of the mother to accompany him. The Convention does not require the court in this country to consider the welfare of the child as paramount, but only to be satisfied as to the grave risk of harm. I am not satisfied that the child would be placed in an intolerable situation, if the mother refused to go back. In weighing up the various factors, I must place in the balance and as of the greatest importance the effect of the court refusing the application under the Convention because of the refusal of the mother to return for her own reasons, not for the sake of the child. Is a parent to create a psychological situation, and then rely upon it? If the grave risk of psychological harm to a child is to be inflicted by the conduct of the parent who abducted him, then it would be relied upon by every mother of a young child who removed him out of the jurisdiction and refused to return. It would drive a coach and four through the Convention, at least in respect of applications relating to young children. I, for my part, cannot believe that this is in the interests of international relations. Nor should the mother, by her own actions, succeed in preventing the return of a child who should be living in his own country and deny him contact with his other parent.