• The court found that the mother kept her son in South Africa for longer than the three-month visit they had agreed on.
  • The court rejected the mother's claim that the father later agreed to the child staying permanently in South Africa.
  • The child must return to Australia, with the court setting out safeguards and requiring financial support from the father.

A four-year-old boy must be returned to Australia after the High Court in the Western Cape found that his mother wrongfully retained him in South Africa in breach of an agreement with his father and failed to prove that the child would face a grave risk of harm if returned.

Judge J Cloete ordered that the child be returned to Australia under the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction. The court found that Australia remained the child's country of habitual residence and that any long-term decisions about where he should live must be determined by Australian courts.

The matter arose after the child's mother travelled to South Africa with him on 22 January 2025. The trip had been agreed between the parents and was intended to last three months, ending on 22 April 2025. However, shortly before the agreed return date, the father was informed that the mother no longer intended to return to Australia with the child.

Judge Cloete found that it was common cause that the father's consent was limited to a three-month visit and that the child remained in South Africa after that period had expired.

The judge noted that the father repeatedly made it clear that he expected the child to return to Australia and warned that he would invoke Hague Convention procedures if this did not happen.

Consent defence rejected

The mother's primary defence was that the father had later consented to the child remaining permanently in South Africa.

She relied on a series of communications between the parties following the expiry of the agreed travel period. According to the mother, the father agreed that the child could continue living in South Africa with her.

Judge Cloete found that the father's communications consistently reflected his position that the child had to return to Australia and that any future relocation would need to be discussed and resolved through mediation or court processes.

"It was not real, positive and unequivocal, and this court is thus left, at best, for the mother, uncertain," the judge wrote.

The court also found that the mother's own messages showed that she remained unsure whether the father would ultimately permit a permanent relocation to South Africa.

Judge Cloete concluded that neither consent nor acquiescence had been established. The judge held, "It follows that the mother's Art 13(a) defence must fail."

Mental health concerns insufficient

The mother's alternative defence was based on Article 13(b) of the Hague Convention. She argued that returning to Australia would severely affect her mental health and that the resulting impact on her parenting would place the child at grave risk of psychological harm.

Evidence before the court showed that the mother had a history of anxiety, depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder. A psychiatrist who had treated her in Australia expressed concern that returning to Australia without adequate support could negatively affect her mental health.

The court accepted that the mother's mental health challenges were genuine and significant. However, Judge Cloete found that the evidence did not meet the exceptionally high threshold required by the Convention.

The judge emphasised that the court was not deciding whether the mother should permanently remain in Australia. Instead, the issue was whether a return would expose the child to a grave risk of harm.

Judge Cloete found that the psychiatrist did not conclude that the mother would be unable to function or parent the child during the period required for Australian courts to consider any relocation application.

The judge wrote, "There is simply insufficient evidence before me to refuse a return under the Convention on this basis."

The court further noted that the mother had continued to care for the child despite her mental health difficulties and that there was no evidence that she had been unable to parent him responsibly. "The mother has failed to discharge the onus in respect of her alternative Art 13(b) defence," Judge Cloete concluded.

Child's interests and return arrangements

The child's legal representative reported that he was a confident and well-adjusted child who enjoyed a close relationship with both parents. Although he expressed a wish to remain in South Africa with his grandmother, the representative believed he would also adjust to returning to Australia if properly prepared.

Judge Cloete found that the child had been shielded from conflict between his parents and had maintained a loving relationship with his father despite the geographical separation.

To facilitate the return, the court imposed a number of conditions aimed at protecting both the mother and the child.

If the mother chooses to accompany the child to Australia, the father must pay for her flight as well as the flight of a support person selected by her. He must also provide accommodation for six months, contribute financially towards the child's maintenance, cover mental health treatment costs not funded by the Australian government and ensure access to a vehicle if necessary.

The father also undertook not to support any civil or criminal proceedings against the mother arising from her retention of the child in South Africa.

The court ordered that the child's return should not take place before 13 July 2026 to allow the mother sufficient time to prepare him for the transition.

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