Britse gezinnen vluchten naar het buitenland om aan de ijzeren greep van Jeugdzorg (Social services) te ontkomen. Het gaat niet veel anders dan in Nederland. In Engeland hebben slachtoffers een ondergronds netwerk waarbij ze elkaar helpen te vluchten.
Mr. Josephs, een 80 jarige Engelse zakenman woont in Monaco en helpt gezinnen te vluchten. "Het is oorlog", zegt hij. Jeugdzorg Dark horse heeft vaker gepubliceerd over de Social services (Jeugdzorg) in Engeland. Met name Christopher Booker heeft veel gepubliceerd over het corrupte Engelse jeugdzorg systeem, waarbij net als in Nederland kinderen handel zijn en veel geld opbrengen voor de Jeugdzorg. Kinderen leveren geld en werkgelegenheid op binnen het Jeugdzorgsysteem.
http://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0026916/geldigheidsdatum_03-08-2013
Ouders vluchten omdat ze geen geloof hebben op een eerlijke kans tijdens een rechtszaak.
Veel Britse ouders hebben geen enkel vertrouwen in het familierecht systeem van Engeland. Ook Nederlandse gezinnen vluchten de grens over. In een systeem waar waarheidsvinding geen deel uitmaakt van het familierecht, en leugens, roddel en insinuaties in AMK/RvdK rapporten aan kinderrechter eerder regel dan uitzondering zijn, is dit niet verwonderlijk.
http://jeugdzorg-darkhorse.blogspot.nl/2013/07/illegale-adoptie-door-jeugdzorg.html
The families say they are forced to flee because they will not get a fair hearing in the UK in the family courts. They turn to shadowy networks, often based online, and run by other parents, many of whom have already lost their children to the care system.
The scale and sophistication of the networks is
extraordinary. We were told of safe houses across the UK where parents and
their children could lie low before heading overseas, of fake birth
certificates and of keys for rented homes in foreign countries that are
exchanged in the middle of the night by strangers connected only by the
networks.
As to the numbers involved it is impossible to verify,
but we were told by one woman central to several groups that help parents get
out of the country, that there has been "anything [from] 300 to 600
families in the past year that have left [the UK] from the involvement of
social care".
The most popular destination is the Republic of Ireland,
but the networks extend across Europe, Mediterranean countries being the other
main destinations for families on the run.
From UK foster care to Cavan
We went to Cavan, a small town in the Republic of Ireland and one of the hubs for
the network. There we met a mother who described a meticulously-planned snatch
operation to steal her four-year-old son from foster care in the UK. At an
organised contact session, she arranged an untraceable car, fake ID papers and
even had a wig waiting in the car. "I knew I had to get him and get to the
boat straight away. I knew that if I got caught, I would be done for
kidnap," she says.
Her son had originally been put into voluntary care after
she had a breakdown. She insists she got better but they refused to return him
- leaving her, she says, with no choice but to run.
Having made it to Ireland she turned herself in to the
authorities in the belief – shared by many in these networks – that she would
get a fairer hearing from Irish social services. "They are not idiots over
here but it's the way they act [and] work completely differently," she
says. "They took him, completed the assessment and decided what was in my
son's best interests."
For this mother that decision turned out to be that she
could keep her son. Having been helped by the network herself, she in turn
began to help others. This is how the networks regenerate themselves and grow.
'Punished for something that we hadn't done'
The charge levelled against the parents we spoke to was
not physical or sexual abuse but emotional abuse or the risk of future
emotional neglect or abuse. They say it is a charge that they cannot defend
themselves against.
We met one British couple, Julie and Andy (not their real
names), hiding out in a southern European country [pictured
above]. The network helped them flee from the UK earlier this year
when they discovered she was pregnant. They are now a couple in hiding.
Like many parents we met, their argument was that they
were not given a fair hearing by a system that was too quick to remove
children. Their child was removed at birth because the mother, who suffered
pre-natal depression during her pregnancy, and the father, were assessed as
posing a risk of future emotional neglect.
According to the couple, the local authority "just
pressed the nuclear button". Talking about their daughter being placed in
care they told Channel 4 News:
"We
hadn't hurt her. We were punished for something that we hadn't done."
While they accept the need for action in some cases they
insist that parents can be accused of something that it is impossible to defend
themselves against: "We recognise that that the child protection system is
important but you can be convicted of the potentiality of causing harm or
neglect."
They are now in hiding. "Once you've lost one you have no chance at all...after our experiences of our first child we have absolutely no confidence at all in the system."
They are now in hiding. "Once you've lost one you have no chance at all...after our experiences of our first child we have absolutely no confidence at all in the system."
Services vs parents
Channel 4 News discovered an unlikely figure in an unlikely location, who is a central
character in these networks. He has taken it upon himself to assist in the
flight of many of these families. Sitting in Monaco, Ian Josephs [pictured left], an 80-year-old British
businessman, puts it bluntly. "It's war," he says, "between
parents who've had their children taken and the social workers who've taken
them."
Having first come across what he sees as family courts'
injustice some 30 years ago, he now helps hundreds of families each year as
they fight the system to keep their children. "I get two or three new
calls every single day practically," he says. "That doesn’t sound too
many, but if you multiply it by 365 it comes to quite a lot."
But it is more than advice: "I'm no Bill Gates, but
I do pay for pregnant women to escape the country."
He is motivated by an unshakeable belief that the system
and the family courts have the wrong approach and that other countries will
treat parents fighting charges of emotional neglect in an entirely different
manner. "If you saw the women that I have seen whose babies have been
snatched from them by truly heartless social workers who've shown no
compassion, no sorrow, no pity, no words of consolation, you would think that
somebody should do something about it," he says.
"Why is it happening so much in England and not in
France, for example, where I live, or Monaco where I live, and not in Spain and
not in Italy? It's a very British phenomena."
Who are the networks helping?
Mr Josephs and the other networks say they screen parents
and do background checks into their histories before offering help. But how
much can they really know about the parents and children they help flee the UK
and the safeguards of the child protection system?
It all poses profound questions about who these networks
are helping and whether they are not in fact putting some children in further
danger. It is a view shared by Professor Corinne May-Chahal, the co-chair of
the College of Social Work.
"It is clearly saying that there is something very wrong with the system,
if the only option people have is to run then there has to be something that
needs to be looked at," she told Channel
4 News.
She adds that the potential risk to some of the children
involved is of serious concern: "There are probably some very vulnerable
children and how can we know they are getting the right help? It is really very
worrying. If what's happening within the system is forcing parents or
encouraging parents to leave then that could well be putting them in more
danger."
And she says that this points to a wider issue in the
system designed to protect children. "We all know the system has to
change. And it’s not just social workers that need to improve - that is the
key. Social work has to work within the system and it is the system that needs
to change, not just one person or professional body within it."
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