OSLO: Norway denied on Thursday accusations from Moroccan Olympic track champion Khalid Skah that Oslo’s embassy in Rabat kidnapped his children amid a custody battle with his estranged wife.
Skah, winner of the 10,000-meter race at the Barcelona Games in 1992, threatened to take the Norwegian government to an international court over the affair, which has triggered a diplomatic row between Norway and Morocco.
“We do not think we did anything reprehensible,” Norwegian Foreign Ministry spokesman Bjoern Jahnsen told AFP.
Norway admits giving refuge to the two children, Selma, who was born in 1993, and Tarik, born in 1996, who have dual Moroccan-Norwegian citizenship, when their mother showed up with them at the Norwegian mission in Rabat.
At their request, the embassy let them leave three days later, officials said.
“They came to our embassy because they feared for their lives. We had good reason to believe them and [Foreign Minister] Jonas Gahr Stoere himself decided that they would be welcome to the [ambassador’s] residence,” Jahnsen said.
“After a few days, their mother and themselves asked to leave and we did not have to ask them questions about what they counted on doing,” he said.
Norway said that it has lost sight of them.
Skah, who charges that his children were kidnapped on the night of July 18-19, said Wednesday he would pursue Norway in international and European courts.
The former Olympian said Tarik and Selma had lived in Rabat since 2006 and that their Norwegian mother, Anne Cecilie Hobscot, left the north African country of her own will in 2007 to live in Norway.
Skah accused the Norwegian ambassador of acting “like a real gang leader when he kidnapped my children” and arranged to have them exit Morocco “in obscure and illegal conditions.”
“I am in anguish,” he said. “My children now are living under the pressure of the Norwegian government.” – AFP
The Lebanese Center for Human Rights (CLDH) is a local non-profit, non-partisan Lebanese human rights organization in Beirut that was established by the Franco-Lebanese Movement SOLIDA (Support for Lebanese Detained Arbitrarily) in 2006. SOLIDA has been active since 1996 in the struggle against arbitrary detention, enforced disappearance and the impunity of those perpetrating gross human violations.
Search This Blog
Labels
Special Tribunal for Lebanon
Detention cases
Judiciary and Prison System
Enforced Disappearance
Women's rights
Kidnappings
ESC Rights
Environment
Non Palestinian refugees and Migrants
Public Freedoms
Palestinian Rights
Military Court
NGOs
Children rights
Torture
Minorities Rights
CLDH in the press
health
Human Rights Defenders
Death Penalty
Lebanese detained in Syria
disabled rights
Political rights
Displaced
LGBT
Racism
Right to life
August 7, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Archives
-
▼
2009
(378)
-
▼
August
(21)
- August 31, 2009 - The Daily Star - Sudan Darfur ab...
- August 31, 2009 - The Daily Star - Lebanon Enforce...
- August 31, 2009 - The Daily Star - Lebanon disappe...
- August 31, 2009 - Al Mustaqbal - Geneva UN Enforce...
- August 31, 2009 - Aliwaa - Lebanon Press Conferen...
- August 31, 2009 - Aliwaa - Lebanon Enforced disapp...
- August 31, 2009 - Al Akhbar - Lebanon disappearanc...
- August 29, 2009 - Al Akhbar - Germany case of Sold...
- August 29, 2009 - Al Mustaqbal - Geneva UN Intl da...
- August 29, 2009 - L'Orient le Jour - USA case of g...
- Alhayat - Fateh el Islam detainees in Roumieh Prison
- Daily Star - Hizbullah Cell accused allege Torture...
- August 15, 2009 - Al Anwar - Yemen Kidnap 15 aid w...
- August 14, 2009 - L'Orient le Jour - Jerusalem pol...
- August 14, 2009 - Al Mustaqbal - USA case of Israe...
- August 13, 2009 - L'Orient le Jour - Le corps de A...
- August 12, 2009 - The Daily Star - Israeli officia...
- August 10, 2009 - L'Orient le Jour - Le président ...
- August 7, 2009 - Al Balad - TCHAD 2 missing from D...
- August 7, 2009 - The Daily Star - Norway denies ki...
- August 5, 2009 - Al Mustaqbal - Israel will not pr...
-
▼
August
(21)
No comments:
Post a Comment