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- Q6054520 subject Q8550921.
- Q6054520 subject Q8573653.
- Q6054520 abstract "Mexico is amongst the world's most popular sources and destinations for international child abduction while also being widely regarded as having one of the least effective systems of protecting and returning internationally abducted children within its borders.To help protect abducted children Mexico signed on to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1990, the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction in 1991, the Inter-American Convention on the International Return of Children and the Inter-American Convention on International Traffic in Minors.Since adhering to the Hague Abduction Convention, the world's most recognized and utilized instrument for addressing international child abduction or parental child trafficking, Mexico has been repeatedly criticized for enjoying the benefit of having its treaty partners protect Mexico's own internationally abducted children, while being consistently non-compliant in fulfilling its reciprocal obligations to protect and return children abducted to Mexico. To date its procedures for enforcing its treaty obligations are unpredictable and entirely ineffective. The Centre for International Family Law Studies in Cardiff, Wales compared seven jurisdictions, including Mexico. The conclusion was that Mexico was by far the worst offender in its failure to return abducted children.In consideration of Mexico's history of noncompliance, as documented extensively over the past 11 years in the US State Department's annual compliance reports, Texas courts made a landmark decision finding Mexico's legal system ineffective and lacking legal mechanisms for the immediate and effective enforcement of child custody orders and, furthermore stating, Mexico posed a risk to children's physical health and safety due to human rights violations committed against children, including child labor and a lack of child abuse laws.The US State Department has posted many travel warnings for Mexico including at least one every year since 2007. In 2010, the murder of three Americans connected to the U.S. Consulate in Juarez prompted the US State Department to modify their warning to authorize the departure of children dependents of U.S. government personnel in U.S. consulates and offer financial assistance to relocating families.Child abduction has been defined as a form of child abuse. and the international abduction of children is a serious human rights issue that continues to plague modern day Mexico. The persistent failure of Mexico to address such systemic and fundamental problems within its borders has prompted many to warn that Mexico runs the serious risk of becoming a failed state with a political system that cannot satisfy the most basic conditions of civic order such as safety in one's streets, home, school and workplace.".
- Q6054520 thumbnail Coat_of_arms_of_Mexico.svg?width=300.
- Q6054520 wikiPageExternalLink mxtoc.html.
- Q6054520 wikiPageExternalLink 2010ComplianceReport.pdf.
- Q6054520 wikiPageExternalLink justice-reforms.
- Q6054520 wikiPageExternalLink mx.html.
- Q6054520 wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Q6054520 wikiPageExternalLink index.do.
- Q6054520 wikiPageExternalLink www.cndh.org.mx.
- Q6054520 wikiPageExternalLink archive.asp?go=090210.
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- Q6054520 wikiPageWikiLink Q8550921.
- Q6054520 wikiPageWikiLink Q8573653.
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- Q6054520 comment "Mexico is amongst the world's most popular sources and destinations for international child abduction while also being widely regarded as having one of the least effective systems of protecting and returning internationally abducted children within its borders.To help protect abducted children Mexico signed on to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1990, the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction in 1991, the Inter-American Convention on the International Return of Children and the Inter-American Convention on International Traffic in Minors.Since adhering to the Hague Abduction Convention, the world's most recognized and utilized instrument for addressing international child abduction or parental child trafficking, Mexico has been repeatedly criticized for enjoying the benefit of having its treaty partners protect Mexico's own internationally abducted children, while being consistently non-compliant in fulfilling its reciprocal obligations to protect and return children abducted to Mexico. ".
- Q6054520 label "International child abduction in Mexico".
- Q6054520 depiction Coat_of_arms_of_Mexico.svg.