INTERPOL and Parental Child Abduction

1. What is International Parental Child Abduction?

International Parental Child Abduction (“IPCA”) represents one of the most challenging areas of cross-border family law. When a child is wrongfully removed to or retained in another jurisdiction without the other parent’s consent, and informal or diplomatic efforts prove unsuccessful, the matter becomes legally complex and difficult to resolve. The paramount consideration must always be the child’s best interests, including their physical, emotional, and psychological well-being. This highlights the need for a coherent, predictable, and effective international legal framework.

2. Interpol’s Legal Framework

INTERPOL’s legal architecture, and in particular Article 83 of the Rules on the Processing of Data, draws a clear boundary excluding matters of a purely private or familial nature from the Organisation’s scope. Child custody disputes fall within this exclusion unless they form an element of a serious criminal offence or organised criminal activity. This limitation exists to prevent the instrumentalisation of INTERPOL mechanisms for advantage in domestic disputes. Yet, notwithstanding this explicit prohibition, instances persist in which INTERPOL has taken a markedly different approach.

3. CCF’s Stance

A notable example concerns the pseudonyms “XX” (the mother) and “YY” (the child). The United States National Central Bureau sought the publication of Blue and Yellow Notices. Before the Commission for the Control of INTERPOL’s Files (“CCF”), the mother submitted that no custody order existed in favour of the father; that she had lawfully exited the United States; that domestic authorities had failed to protect the child from alleged abuse; and that the child was now safe, settled, and supported in the receiving State. Despite these representations, the CCF upheld the Notices, characterising the case as a criminal matter warranting international police cooperation.

4. Concerns

First concern: a lack of consistency and fidelity to INTERPOL’s governing rules. The RPD expressly excludes private and family disputes from INTERPOL’s systems unless they are linked to serious criminality. Upholding the Notices in circumstances that fall within a custody dispute calls into question whether the Organisation is applying its legal framework coherently and predictably.

Second concern: a failure to distinguish between different categories of conduct: INTERPOL has conflated parental relocation motivated by legitimate welfare considerations with genuine criminal acts such as kidnapping by third parties or trafficking. Crucially, many IPCA cases involve a parent leaving the jurisdiction to escape a violent spouse, acting to protect themselves and the child from a credible and immediate risk of harm. Treating these situations as equivalent is incompatible with INTERPOL’s mandate and inconsistent with international standards on child protection and fundamental rights.

5. Recommendations

These concerns require clear and enforceable reforms. INTERPOL should prohibit the use of any notice in custody disputes and parental child abduction unless supported by a final custody order and credible evidence of serious criminality. A mandatory risk and welfare assessment must exclude cases where a parent has fled domestic violence, ensuring they are not treated as offenders. The General Secretariat and the CCF must implement stricter screening, informed by specialised child-protection expertise, to prevent parental welfare relocations from being mischaracterised as criminal abduction or trafficking.

author avatar
Konstantina ZIVLA International Criminal Lawyer: INTERPOL & Extradition
Konstantina Zivla is an international criminal defence lawyer specialising in INTERPOL Red Notice removals, extradition law, and cross-border criminal cases. She represents clients across the UK, Europe, and internationally, advising on complex multi-jurisdictional matters involving international cooperation mechanisms.

Related Posts

17

Apr
Red Notices - Statistics
The Red Notices You Can’t See

Are all Red Notices Public? Two of the most common questions I encounter in practice are: (a) Will I be arrested if a Red Notice exists against me? (b) If my name does not appear on INTERPOL’s public website, does that mean I am not subject to a Red Notice? The first question is addressed …

6

Apr
Extradition and INTERPOL
5 Myths About Extradition

1st Myth: Extradition is automatic This is the most dangerous and most common misunderstanding. Extradition is not a favour between states. It is not a request that compels surrender, but only invites scrutiny. Extradition is a structured legal procedure governed by Bilateral/Multi-National Treaties [if any], domestic legislation, and constitutional principles. There is always a legality …

23

Feb
INTERPOL RED NOTICES - CRITERIA FOR PUBLICATION
INTERPOL Red Notices: Criteria for Publication

This article forms part of the series "Interpol Red Notices: An Anatomy of Power" published in the International Enforcement Law Reporter Blog on 12 February 2026. An INTERPOL Red Notice is one of the most serious international enforcement measures a person can face. Although technically described as a request to locate and provisionally arrest an …