The five children of a Pentecostal couple in Norway were taken from
their family because their parents spanked them, not because of their
religious faith, according to a lawyer close to the case.
Ruth and Marius Bodnariu lost their children to Norway's Barnevernet
or children's services last November in a case that has attracted
world-wide attention.
It was reported that the couple's religious faith
had raised concerns at the children's school and their case was taken up
by religious liberty campaigners. The case also fitted others where the
children of immigrant or mixed-ethnicity families had been removed;
Marius Bodnariu is from Romania.
US-based Peter Costea, president of the Alliance for Romania's Families, said that
court documents showed that the children were removed because they told
investigators their parents spanked them as a disciplinary measure, not
for religious reasons. Corporal punishment of children is illegal in
Norway and schools are obliged to report it.
A local media cites a letter to Norway's ambassador to Romania,
Tove Bruvik Westberg, in which Costea described the authorities'
behaviour as "totalitarian extremism".
He wrote that Norway has violated the Bodnariu's parenting rights and added that the "punishment doesn't fit the crime."
"The Bodnariu family has been accused of spanking its children. Yet,
the authorities translated this accusation into child abuse, which is
farthest from the truth," Costea wrote. "Biological parents have the
inherent right to reasonably discipline their children. The fact that
Norway has banned corporal punishment of children does not mean that
Norway is right in this matter and the rest of the world wrong."
He said the authorities had been "irrational and extreme".
Costea stated that testimony from neighbours and the
school principal about the good health and wellbeing of the children
had been disregarded by the Barnevernet.
At least 10 members of the Romanian parliament travelled to Oslo last week to intercede with the Norwegian authorities.
A decision about whether to put the children up for adoption will be taken in March.
A petition in
support of the family has reached more than 57,000 signatures. The
Barnevernet, which has refused to comment on the case citing privacy
issues, has been the target of intense criticism not just from Romania but from many other countries for its policies.
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