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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Lachaux v Independent Print Ltd [2015] EWHC 620 (QB) (11 March 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2015/620.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 620 (QB), [2015] CN 469 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a High Court Judge
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BRUNO LACHAUX |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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INDEPENDENT PRINT LIMITED |
Defendant |
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David Price QC (of David Price Solicitors and Advocates) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 4 February 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir David Eady :
Introduction
The article in The Independent
"(Sub-heading) Family of Afsana Lachaux claim UK is unwilling to help for fear of risking jet deal.
(1) The family of a British woman trapped in the United Arab Emirates and facing charges of kidnapping her young son have accused the UK authorities of abandoning her.
(2) Afsana Lachaux, 46, from Poplar, east London, was a British civil servant when she met a wealthy French currency dealer who she married in 2010. The couple moved to Dubai where she gave birth to their son, Louis.
(3) Four months later, the family claim, her husband became violent. They also claim he hid Louis's French passport, and refused to allow him to be registered as a British citizen. Fearing for her own safety, they say, Ms Lachaux escaped, taking Louis with her.
(4) She tried to return to the UK, but her husband secured a travel ban from a Dubai court and requested that her passport be confiscated. He also initiated divorce proceedings and won custody of Louis.
(5) Mrs Lachaux turned to the UK consulate for help. At first, says her son Rabbhi Yahiya, 26, officials referred her to a refuge for victims of domestic violence. But, he added, they didn't realise the refuge was legally bound to notify her husband once she checked in.
(6) Mrs Lachaux was forced on the run again. She again contacted the consulate and was advised to go to the police station to face charges of libel her ex-husband had brought.
(7) There she was physically assaulted by a police officer, her son claims, and Louis was denied food and water.
(8) Then in October, when his mother was meeting a friend, her ex-husband snatched Louis from her arms. She has not seen him since.
(9) Ms Lachaux's ex-husband filed a further case against her for kidnapping, and if found guilty, she could face several years in prison.
(10) Mr Yahiya says he has written several letters to the Foreign Office to no avail. 'As a family, we are disgusted with the way they have handled my mother's case,' he said.
(11) In the past year, Prime Minister David Cameron and Foreign Secretary William Hague, have made official trips to Dubai in a bid to secure a lucrative sale of Eurofighter Typhoon military jets.
(12) 'Most of our calls were never returned. They don't want to jeopardise the sale,' claimed Mr Yahiya.
(13) Rori Donaghy, director of Emirates Centre for Human Rights, added: 'The British government have failed to support Afsana, because they were seduced by the deal.' Meanwhile Nick McGeehan, Middle East Director for Human Rights Watch, said the 'UAE's laws discriminate against women', meaning 'Mrs Lachaux cannot be guaranteed a fair trial.'
(14) Mrs Lachaux's MP, Labour's Jim Fitzpatrick, told The Independent: 'The way Afsana Lachaux has been treated is appalling. As a woman in a Muslim country the authorities there have taken the word of the man as true.'
(15) A Foreign Office spokesperson said: 'We cannot interfere in the judicial process of another country. We will continue to provide consular assistance to the family'."
The article in the Evening Standard
"(1) Today, in a Dubai courtroom, more than 4,000 miles away from her home, a jury will decide if Afsana Lachaux is guilty of kidnapping her three-year-old son Louis from her ex-husband.
(2) The 46-year-old former civil servant from Poplar may never see her child again. Her older son from a previous marriage, Rabbhi Yahiya, 26, says: 'Unless the British Government intervenes, my mum risks going to jail for something she didn't do, after which she will be deported and lose her son. All she did was leave an abuser.'
(3) Despite being accused of kidnapping, Lachaux hasn't seen her three-year-old since October last year, when her husband allegedly took him out of his pushchair in the street. The case has cost the family a 'debilitating'£70,000 in legal fees and left 'an overriding feeling of helplessness'.
(4) The exact charges relate to Lachaux not bringing her son to a custody visit with her ex-husband, who cannot be named for legal reasons, in March 2012. But Yahiya, who works for the British Council, gives his mother's version of events. 'She didn't turn up because on previous visits she was assaulted by him in public. She told the police but they didn't want to hear it.' The allegations of domestic violence have not been tested in any court, and her ex-husband has denied them.
(5) Lachaux is originally Bangladeshi but grew up in east London, where she married and brought up Rabbhi, 26, and his 23-year-old brother. 'She rose up the civil service from local government and worked in regeneration. She was a successful, sociable, headstrong woman. I am proud of her. We liked going to Greenwich as a family.' She and Yahiya's father are divorced.
(6) In 2009 Lachaux told her children she was seeing a French man, a comfortably off avionics engineer based in Dubai. Yahiya says: 'I never asked where they met. We were glad my mum had found someone and was happy.'
(7) They married in summer 2009 in London and moved to Dubai in February 2010. 'It was a big adventure – the first time my mum had lived abroad. They were in love and planning to have a child so she was excited. Now I remember that he seemed reserved and only his brother and parents came to the wedding but at the time I didn't question it. It was a happy time.'
(8) Louis was born two months premature, in April 2010, and shortly afterwards Yahiya stopped hearing from his mother as frequently. 'We thought it was odd that she hadn't brought Louis to see us. In November we Skyped.'
(9) He recounts what he heard that day.
(10) 'She told me he had beaten her and showed me the bruises. She was crying, which I'd never seen her do before. She told me that since Louis was born her husband had become controlling. He refused to let her register Louis as a British citizen, got him a French passport and hid it with his birth certificate outside the house. The impression I got was that he didn't want her to take Louis anywhere without him. A woman can't work in the United Arab Emirates without her husband's permission so she was confined to the house. Eventually she told the police but they just said, "Go home to your husband". It's seen as the man's right to chastise his spouse there.'
(11) A year later, Yahiya persuaded her to escape. 'I went to Dubai in April 2011. We fled but couldn't leave the country because we didn't have Louis's passport.' They stayed in hotels and rented apartments but, according to Yahiya, things got worse. 'In June 2011 she was taken to Bur Dubai police station for 'absconding'. She and Louis were put in the same cell where a British man had allegedly been beaten to death by guards a month earlier.'
(12) Yahiya says she was locked up for four hours in 40-degree heat and denied food and water. 'While she was holding her one-year-old and asking why she was there, a prison guard pushed her in the face.' Although Lachaux had never been charged with any offences, her passport was confiscated by Dubai police.
(13) Her husband obtained visiting rights to see Louis, so every week Lachaux would meet him in the park. According to what his mother told Yahiya: 'Once he tried to snatch Louis and it badly bruised his head,' Yahiya alleges. 'She went to the police but they said they didn't care if she lived or died.'
(14) She went to the Dubai Foundation for Women and Children in February 2012. 'It's the only refuge in Dubai and they had a legal obligation to tell her husband where she was. She and Louis shared bunks with illegally trafficked sex workers.'
(15) In March 2012 she went into hiding and stopped the visits – it is for this that she is being prosecuted. 'I told her not to go any more. I was concerned for her.' Yahiya and his brother received an email from her husband, warning that if they went to Dubai he would report them for aiding a kidnap. She lived on the sofas of friends and 'in squalid accommodation, living off noodles' with Louis who, his brother says, is 'sharp and funny'.
(16) And then, on October 29 last year, her husband tracked her down. 'Dubai's a small place. She told me he took Louis – it happened in an instant.' Lachaux hasn't seen her son since.
(17) When she called the British Embassy to report the incident they told her that in August 2012 her husband had obtained a divorce in a Sharia court and been given custody. 'My mum didn't even know. Men can do that in Dubai. She was denied custody on claims that Louis had eczema, making her an "unfit mother".' She claimed to Yahiya that she did not know the four witnesses who testified against her.
(18) Since this began, Lachaux's family have been trying to help but the Dubai justice system has proved impenetrable.
(19) 'For three years I have been in touch with the Dubai Embassy, the British Embassy there, William Hague and the Middle East ministers. I've told them about every incident but they say they can't intervene in the judicial process of another country. Our MP Jim Fitzpatrick has been supportive, and asked David Cameron to raise my mum's case when he's been there. I've read about an Austrian woman and a Norwegian woman being raped there, and both their governments intervened. Why can't ours do anything to help my mum? Do you understand the frustration?' The Standard contacted the Dubai police for a response, and was referred to the British Consulate in the UAE. The FCO spokesman said: 'Consular staff have been providing assistance to Mrs Lachaux since 2011 including attending court hearings with her. Consular officials have approached the UAE authorities about this case and we will continue to work closely with them. However we cannot interfere in the judicial process of another country. We must respect their systems just as we expect them to respect the UK's legal processes.'
(20) Meanwhile, Yahiya awaits the court case. 'Every time I speak to my mum I try to keep her spirits up. She's still strong but her face has changed. She's so skinny and on tenterhooks the whole time. My family and I would like the British authorities to ask the Dubai government to drop her case, overturn the current custody order and return her passport so that she and her son can come home to London'."
The nature of the exercise
The Independent: Claimant's meanings
i) became violent towards his ex-wife Afsana soon after the birth of their son, which caused her, fearing for her safety, to escape and go on the run with the child;ii) having tracked Afsana down, callously and without justification snatched their son back from his mother's arms; and
iii) falsely accused Afsana of kidnapping their son, a false charge which if upheld could result in her, quite unfairly and wrongly, spending several years in a Dubai jail.
The Independent: Defendant's meanings
The Evening Standard article: Claimant's meanings
i) became violent and abusive towards his ex-wife Afsana within months of marrying her, beating her and leaving her with bruises on at least one occasion;ii) assaulted Afsana in public on custody visits relating to their young son;
iii) attempted to snatch their son on one custody visit, leaving him with a badly bruised head;
iv) callously and without justification snatched their son from out of his pushchair in the street; and
v) subjected Afsana to the grotesque injustice of facing jail in Dubai for "abducting" her own child, when in truth she had only fled with him to escape the Claimant's violent abuse.
The Evening Standard article: Defendant's meanings
Conclusion
(a) The Independent
i) became violent towards his ex-wife Afsana soon after the birth of their son, which caused her, fearing for her safety, to escape and go on the run with the child;ii) having tracked Afsana down, callously and without justification snatched their son back from his mother's arms (and has never returned him);
iii) falsely accused Afsana of kidnapping their son, a false charge which if upheld could result in her, quite unfairly and wrongly, spending several years in a Dubai jail;
iv) was content to use Emirati law and its law enforcement system, which discriminate against women, in order to deprive Afsana of custody of and access to their son Louis;
v) hid the child's French passport and refused to allow him to be registered as a British citizen, as Afsana wished;
vi) was violent, abusive and controlling and caused Afsana to fear for her own safety;
vii) caused her passport to be confiscated thus for her to be trapped in the UAE;
viii) obtained custody on a false basis and also initiated a prosecution of Afsana in the UAE, which was founded upon a false allegation of abduction, and which gave rise to the risk of a lengthy prison sentence there.
(b) The Evening Standard
i) became violent and abusive towards his ex-wife Afsana within months of marrying her, beating her and leaving her with bruises on at least one occasion;ii) assaulted Afsana in public on custody visits relating to their young son;
iii) attempted to snatch their son on one custody visit, leaving him with a badly bruised head;
iv) callously and without justification snatched their son from out of his pushchair in the street (and has never returned him);
v) subjected Afsana to the injustice of facing jail in Dubai for "abducting" her own child, when in truth she had only fled with him to escape the Claimant's violent abuse;
vi) having chosen to obtain a divorce in a Sharia court, also used Emirati law and its law enforcement system, which discriminate against women, in order to deprive Afsana of custody of and access to their son Louis;
vii) hid the child's French passport and refused to allow him to be registered as a British citizen, as Afsana wished;
viii) was violent, abusive and controlling and caused Afsana to fear for her own safety;
ix) caused her passport to be confiscated thus for her to be trapped in the UAE;
x) threatened to report Rabbhi and Shabbir Yahiya to the police for aiding a kidnap if they came to Dubai;
xi) caused Afsana to go on the run with Louis;
xii) obtained custody on a false basis and also initiated a prosecution of Afsana in the UAE, which was founded upon a false allegation of abduction, and which gave rise to the risk of a lengthy prison sentence there.
The repetition rule
Issues that remain outstanding