By Christopher Booker
6:51PM BST 01 Jun 2013
Dutch
social workers catch the English disease
Social workers are ripping
families apart for no good reason in Holland but there such travesties of
justice can be reported
When it comes to social workers ripping families apart for no good reason,
it seems the English disease is spreading. I have lately been following a
bizarre case involving the kidnapping by Dutch social workers of two
10-year-old twins from a Russian-speaking Latvian family long resident in
Holland. Pretty well everything about this case echoes what goes on behind
closed doors in England: social workers colluding with a dysfunctional father
to justify snatching distraught children from their mother, to incarcerate them
miserably in care homes; the courts refusing to test evidence and accepting
lies. But because this case is in Holland, not Britain, the family can be named
and its shocking details publicised.
Unusually, for instance, we can see on YouTube the harrowing scenes from
March 2012 which show the screaming children being carried by police from their
family home to a waiting police van (Google “Kidnap of children from their
mother by Dutch social services”). Nikolai and Anastasia Antonova were removed
from their mother, Jelena, for three stated reasons. The first, astonishingly,
was that they spoke Russian rather than Dutch at home (this is in clear breach
of two articles of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, which enjoins
respect for a child’s right to speak his or her family’s language). A second
was the baseless claim that the family might return to Latvia to escape from
the children’s estranged father, who had joined a weird cult that caused the
family intolerable strain.
The third, according to the social workers who were working closely with
the father, was that the children had “severely conflicting loyalties to their
parents”. The children had made clear that they were frightened of their father
and did not want to see him again.
Social services’ involvement began in 2010, when they tried to re-establish
contact between the children and their father, who had already been
investigated over claims of abuse against their older stepbrother Ilja. Now
aged 24, he is a capable young man who has played a key part in fighting for
his siblings’ release from the institutional care homes where they have been
ill-treated and very unhappy.
Thanks to his success in publicising their plight in the media, he has more
than once been arrested by the police. He has also won the support of two
robust lawyers, a father and son, who have fought the case through a fraught
succession of hearings.
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Last November, the order under which the children were given into the care
of a private company called Jeugdzorg Bureau lapsed. Jelena took her overjoyed
children back. But a court accepted a new order, fraudulently backdated to
cover the error, and the children were returned to another care company which
earns €1,000 a week for looking after them.
In February, thanks to Ilja and a Latvian
MEP, the family’s cause was taken up by the Committee of Petitions in the
European Parliament, which asked for the Dutch government to explain its
conduct in the case. The committee heard evidence from six other countries also
angry over the seizure of their children by Dutch social services.
This story was widely covered in Latvia and Russia, provoking a
demonstration outside the Dutch embassy in Riga. The Dutch government has still
not replied to the request for a report on its conduct. Ten days ago, the
family’s lawyers won a victory in the Dutch court of appeal, which castigated
the social workers for their illegal backdating of last year’s care order,
ruling that the children must be returned immediately to their mother. Within
hours, however, the child-protection service of the Dutch ministry of justice,
which had previously refused to intervene further in the case, persuaded a
family court to reverse the higher court’s order. The twins thus remain in a
care home, earning the company which runs it £42,000 a year.
The children are forbidden to speak Russian, own a mobile phone or watch
the news on television. All this is in clear breach of articles in the UN
Convention. Indeed, not the least shocking aspect of this story is that the
Dutch authorities’ treatment of these children appears to be in breach of no
fewer than 17 separate articles of this treaty, to which Holland is a
signatory. But much the same is true of pretty well every case I have
investigated here in Britain, where children have been snatched from their
families for similarly dubious reasons.
The only difference is that in other countries such travesties of justice
can be reported. In Britain, as we know, these horrifying stories must remain
almost entirely buried from public view.
Fantastisch!! Zonder internationale hulp zullen we het tij niet kunnen keren, vrees ik.
BeantwoordenVerwijderenEn wat Ilja en zijn familie concreet betreft is BJZ c.s. nu niet echt het milieu dat zelf wel eens over de grens gekeken heeft en zelf ergens buitenlander geweest is. Ook lijken me BJZ niet het soort mensen dat zich in kan en wil leven in anderen, dus zij vinden elke levensvorm die iets van de hunne afwijkt vreemd.
Een Nederlandse Europeaan
P.s. Russisch is b.v. een heel nuttige taal. En als je je kind echt een goede taal mee wilt geven, zou je -ook als autochtone Nederlander- Chinees kiezen, dè taal van de toekomst. Réken dat BJZ dàt vreemd zou vinden ;-)
Het is niet Engeland die Nederland infecteerde maar andersom. Het NJI is daar mede-schuldig aan.
BeantwoordenVerwijderenZelfs in de VS worden kinderen niet meer zomaar uit huis geplaatst zoals dat hier in Europa gebeurt, daar krijgen ouders of familieleden de kans om te laten zien dat het juist goed kan gaan met hulp aan huis.
De machthebbers hebben elkaar nodig; als de VN weet heeft van deze zaken, waarom delen ze alleen maar tikjes uit aan de regering en Justitie (rechters)? Als Amnesty op de hoogte is waarom komen ze niet in actie nadat ze gesprekken gevoerd hebben met die machthebbers? Wat gaat het EP in Brussel doen? Wat doet de regering in dit land tegen de kinderrechtenschending en de mishandelingen die ze dagelijks moeten ontberen, in pleeggezinnen/jeugdinstellingen,aangedaan door incapabele rechters en bjz ambtenaren? Ze vullen elkaars zakken ten koste van het leed van onze kinderen en hun ouders/familie/vrienden, dat is alles.
Money makes the world go around sir Brooker.