SINGAPORE, Feb 20 — Laws could be introduced to prevent parents embroiled in custody battles from breaching court orders and leaving the jurisdiction with their children.

Announcing this at the Family Justice Courts work plan seminar held this morning, presiding judge of the Family Justice Courts, Judicial Commissioner Valerie Thean, said it will be discussing “stop order legislation” with Government ministries and other agencies this year.

More divorce cases are becoming cross-border, and four in 10 divorces — or 2,502 divorces — in local courts last year involved at least one party who was a foreigner.

Singapore needs to develop the infrastructure to support the rule of law in cross-border disputes, said Thean.

“The stakes for parents are extremely high in these cases. Whichever way the court decides, one of the parents would invariably by physically separated from their children across frontiers.

“With the ease of international travel, otherwise law-abiding parents often feel compelled to take the law into their own hands.”

Although Singapore is already party to the Hague Convention, stop order laws will help in two ways, Thean said.

A stop order would cut out the long process of seeking a child’s return after abduction to another signatory country.

Second, although the Convention has about 80 signatories, there are many other countries that are not a party, “in particular those in our immediate Asian region”, noted Thean.

“As Singapore grows as a transnational hub, more will require greater protection.”

The Hague Convention seeks to protect children from being abducted and retained across international boundaries, by providing a procedure to bring about their prompt return.

Stop order laws exist in places such as Hong Kong, New Zealand and Australia.

Cases of parents defying court orders have happened here.

In 2014, a district judge barred a Singaporean man from relocating to Spain with his new family (Spanish wife and baby) and three children from his previous marriage.

The father appealed against the decision — unsuccessfully, as it turned out — but four months before the appeal was even heard, he had taken two of the three children from his previous marriage to Spain.

The High Court judge had dismissed the appeal as it was not in the children’s interests; they would be uprooted from their lives in Singapore and contact with their American mother would be reduced.

The impact on children taken out of jurisdiction without the consent of the other parent can be serious and irreversible, noted Thean.

Studies have found a high proportion of them suffer from mental health effects that include post-traumatic stress, psychotic episodes, fear of abandonment or panic attacks. — TODAY