India not ready to sign the Hague treaty

ForumIAS announcing GS Foundation Program for UPSC CSE 2025-26 from 10th August. Click Here for more information.

India not ready to sign the Hague treaty

Hague treaty, inter-country abduction of children by parents

News:

  • India is not yet ready to sign the Hague treaty on the civil aspects of international child abduction.

Important facts:

  • There has been immense pressure from the U.S. on the government to sign the treaty.
  • A committee constituted by the Centre to examine legal issues involved in international parental abduction submitted its report in April, opposing a central provision of the Hague Convention.
  • India will follow Japan’s example and put safeguards in place before acceding to the Hague treaty
  • Arguments against not singing treaty:
  • According to the Indian government the criterion of habitual residence of the child, which is used to determine whether the child was wrongfully removed by a parent as well as to seek the return of the child to the country of habitual residence, was not in the best interest of the child.
  • India has long held the view that the decision could lead to harassment of women escaping marital discord or domestic violence
  • Suggestions:
  • Setting a Child Removal Disputes Resolution Authority to act as a nodal body to decide on the custody of the child as well as a model law to deal with such disputes.
  • The government is contemplating assigning the National Commission for Protection of Children the responsibility to adjudicate on such cases along with a judicial expert.
  • Recent updates:
  • The government in 2016 had decided that it will not sign the Hague treaty, later it appointed a panel under Rajesh bindal to prepare a report indicating that there was a some rethinking within the government on the matter.
About Hague Convention:

·         The Hague Convention is a multi-national treaty that seeks to protect children wrongfully removed by one of the parents from the custody of the other parent.

·         Concluded on May 29, 1993 in The Hague, the Netherlands, the Convention establishes international standards of practices for intercountry adoptions.

·         It enables intercountry adoption to take place when, among other steps:

1-      The child has been deemed eligible for adoption by the child’s country of origin; and

2-      Due consideration has been given to finding an adoption placement for the child in its country of origin.

3-      The Convention provides for recognition by other party countries of adoptions made in accordance with the Convention.

Print Friendly and PDF
Blog
Academy
Community