Sailor Laura Dekker may be taken from dad

Last updated 23:30 22/12/2009
Laura Dekker
AP
RETURNING HOME: Runaway Laura Dekker is being sent back to her Dutch parents after fleeing to the Caribbean after dreams of sailing solo around the world collapsed.

Relevant offers

Europe

Olympics trigger record $815,000 rent for home Greece battles to salvage bailout package Prosecutors want five-year Berlusconi jail term Pilot dies during flight Wills away as boy fronts with Valentine for Kate Greece fails to pull out of recession Appeal against Amanda Knox acquittal Fears Greece will fall into chaos Murdoch battle looms over Sun showdown Deaf mute claims to have been kept as sex slave

New Zealand-born Dutch teenager Laura Dekker faces the possibility of being removed from her father's custody as she returned to the Netherlands after disappearing from home and flying to the Caribbean.

Dutch newspaper De Volkskrant reported that the Bureau of Youth Care wants to remove her from her father's home, where she lives.

Bureau spokesman Joost Lanshage declined to comment on the report.

"We didn't publicise this," he said. "We first want to see how Laura is."

Utrecht District Court spokeswoman Edmee Leeman confirmed that a hearing had been scheduled for Tuesday afternoon to discuss Dekker. Leeman had no further details about the hearing.

Dekker made headlines earlier this year when a court banned her from attempting to become the youngest person to sail solo around the world.

At the same time, the court ordered the youth bureau to appoint a temporary guardian to liaise with her father about all important decisions in Dekker's life. The court would have to approve any request by the bureau to change Dekker's living arrangements.

Dekker's father is a keen sailor and has always said he believes his daughter is capable of sailing alone around the world even though her longest solo voyage so far has been to Britain and back.

Dekker was born on a boat in New Zealand while her parents were sailing around the world. She is widely acknowledged - even by the judges - to be an excellent sailor.

Police spokesman Bernhard Jens said Dekker was interviewed by police at Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport before being turned over to child care authorities.

Jens declined to reveal what was said at the interview.

"We asked her a lot of questions ... she spoke to us," he said. "I can't yet say anything about how she made the trip."

He said Dekker was tired after her flight home.

"That is logical. She's a young girl who went on a long journey," he said.

Lanshage said his bureau had spoken to Dekker but gave no details, citing privacy rules.

Dekker was shielded from waiting media after her arrival early Tuesday morning on a flight from the Netherlands Antilles island of Curacao.

Police now want to know how she managed to fly to the island of St Maarten and whether anybody helped her.

Dekker's mother, who is divorced from her father, reported her missing on Friday. Police on St Maarten said she flew there ib Thursday via Paris.

Dutch police announced late on Sunday they had tracked her down, but are still trying to piece together exactly how she managed to get there.

Ad Feedback

Dekker's grandparents criticised youth welfare workers for their treatment of Dekker in a letter published in Tuesday's edition of De Volkskrant.

"Since the Bureau of Youth Care got involved, we have seen Laura change from a positive teenager into a child who has built a shield around herself and lost all trust in adults," wrote her grandparents Dick and Riek Dekker.

- Reuters

Special offers

Featured Promotions

Sponsored Content