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Introduction
This guide aims to provide a roadmap for handling cases concerning the Hague Convention on Child Abduction (the “Convention”), particularly on its mechanics, evidence and welfare checklists, mediation pathways, and the immediate steps that every party should take.
International Framework of the Hague Convention
The Hague Convention on Child Abduction establishes a uniform framework for the prompt return of children wrongfully removed or retained across borders. Two provisions are particularly central:
The importance of timing and international coordination cannot be overstated. Practitioners must anticipate these statutory exceptions and prepare evidence accordingly, while liaising with foreign counsel to ensure mirror orders and enforceability across jurisdictions.
Steps should be taken when child abduction/unlawful remaining is discovered
The following checklist identifies steps and considerations that parents and practitioners should prioritize:
Jurisdictional consideration
1. Whether the originating and destination jurisdictions are signatories to the Convention.
Orders & Planning
1. Review the existing custody and access orders. Obtaining legal advice on whether the existing orders confer jurisdiction under the Hague Convention.
2. Inform your local Central Authority and check if it could provide any cross border assistance.
3. Check which government department/body is the Central Authority of the destination jurisdiction and arrange initial contact.
4. Consider engaging a local specialist law firm with relevant experience to provide initial advice.
5. Plan necessary travel arrangements.
Evidence & Safeguards
1. Preserve all relevant evidence, communications, school records, medical records, in an organised, chronological format.
Cross‑border Legal Support
1. After the evidence is collated and obtaining initial legal advice, get in touch with the Central Authority of your local government as well as the Central Authority of the destination jurisdiction.
2. If the Central Authority of the destination jurisdiction is not a legal department and you would like to initiate legal proceeding for the return of the child, engage a local law firm in the destination jurisdiction and start proceedings.
3. Depending on the rules of the destination jurisdiction, consider engaging in family mediation with the other parent. Seek specialist advice from family lawyers experienced in both parental responsibility and Hague Convention cases.
Evidence and Presentation
Presenting compelling evidence in support of a parental-responsibility or custody application requires careful consideration and organisation. The table below summarises the principal evidence categories:
| Type of Evidence | What It Proves | Forms of Presentation |
| Communications (emails, messages, recordings) | Cooperation or conflict between parents; evidence of poor conduct towards the child or communications that affect parent and child relationships | Exhibit chronologically in an affidavit; highest key passages; ensure admissibility (lawful recording) |
| School reports, attendance records and teacher observations | Child’s educational needs, stability and parental involvement | Attach certified copies; include a summary table of attendance and grades |
| Medical records and specialist reports | Child’s health needs; any history of injury or neglect; psychological impact of separation | Obtain with consent or under court’s order; when contested, present through expert witness |
| Witness statements (from family, friends and/or professionals) | Quality of parenting, home environment, and child’s expressed preferences | Filed as sworn affidavits; ensure your witnesses are available for cross-examination |
| Expert reports (child psychologist, social worker and/or custody evaluator) | Professional assessment of child’s welfare, risk of harm, and parental capacity | Commission through court-appointed or jointly instructed expert(s); comply with Practice Direction |
When gathering evidence of poor conduct towards the child or communications that affect parent and child relationships, practitioners should look for patterns like systematic denigration of the other parent, obstruction of contact, coaching the child before interviews, and unexplained refusal by the child to spend time with the other parent. Courts will scrutinise such evidence carefully and may order a social investigation report or appoint a guardian ad litem to assess the situation independently.
Hague Procedure in Hong Kong: Forms, Timelines and Practical Steps
Hong Kong implements the Hague Convention via the Child Abduction and Custody Ordinance (Cap. 512). A parent seeking the return of a child to or from Hong Kong under the Hague Convention should follow the following procedural pathway:
Step 1: Contact the Central Authority. The Department of Justice (DoJ) is the designated Central Authority. Initial contact can be made through the DoJ’s child abduction portal.
Step 2: Complete Form DJ‑C30. This is the official “Request for Return of Child” form, available from the DoJ. It requires details of both parents, the child, the circumstances of the removal, and evidence of the applicant’s custody or parental-responsibility rights.
Step 3: Assemble supporting evidence. This includes court orders, birth certificates, evidence of habitual residence, and any parenting plans or consent agreements that establish the scope of parental responsibility.
Step 4: Initiate Court Proceedings. For incoming cases, the DoJ files proceedings in Hong Kong courts. For outgoing cases, the DoJ transmits the application to the relevant foreign Central Authority.
Step 5: Seek Urgent Interim Orders. Applicants should request port‑alert orders or injunctions to prevent further removal of the child while proceedings are pending.
Legal Aid in Hague Convention Cases in Hong Kong
Applicants under the Hague Convention are eligible to apply for Legal Aid in Hong Kong.
(i) Practitioners should advise clients to apply early, as Legal Aid processing time may affect interim relief; Hague Convention cases are often urgent and may require interim orders before aid is granted.
(ii) Even if financially eligible, applicants must show reasonable grounds for pursuing the case.
(iii) Legal Aid covers Hong Kong proceedings, but enforceability orders abroad require separate arrangements with foreign counsel.
Enforcement of Return Orders in Hong Kong
Once a Hong Kong court makes a return order under the Hague Convention, enforcement is critical.
Need Legal Advice?
For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kay K.W. Chan at Tamar Chambers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
Contributor Credits
Kenneth Fung Kam Yin, Poon Hoi Lam Jasmine and Zhong Han Olivia
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