Laura Dekker
Child care authorities have asked a Dutch court to extend
their guardianship over 14-year-old New Zealand born sailor
Laura Dekker for another year, a move that would further delay
her plan to sail solo around the world.
The application was made at a closed-door hearing in the
southern Dutch city of Middelburg. A ruling is scheduled for
July 27.
Dekker's lawyer Peter de Lange did not immediately return
calls seeking comment.
Dekker was made a ward of the state last year after her plan
to try to become the youngest person to sail solo around the
world raised concerns over her physical ability and her
social development. Both her parents, who are divorced, back
the plan.
Dekker was born on a yacht in New Zealand waters while her
parents were sailing around the world and holds a New Zealand
passport.
Richard Bakker, a spokesman for the Council for Child Care,
said authorities hoped to end uncertainty for Dekker by
applying for a year extension rather than repeatedly asking
for one-month extensions.
At a hearing last month, when the guardianship was prolonged
by a month, De Lange said Dekker was working to meet 14
conditions imposed by the court nine months ago before it
would let her set sail.
She has obtained a first aid diploma, practiced functioning
while sleep-deprived and arranged to follow schoolwork via
the internet, he said.
Last month, she sailed solo to England and back - 22 hours
each way - to show her command of her small yacht and its
seaworthiness.
However, child care authorities are still concerned about the
14-year-old's ability to handle the perils of a
round-the-globe voyage on her own.
"Our focus is not is she able to sail, because she can sail,"
Bakker said. "Our focus is her social and physical
development, that is our concern."
The dangers facing Dekker were underscored last month when a
16-year-old California girl, Abby Sunderland, had to be
rescued from her solo round-the-world trip after powerful
waves snapped her mast in the Indian Ocean.
Sunderland was rescued two days after the alarm was raised,
in a costly mission by the Australian military who spotted
her thousands of miles from the nearest land.
Bookmark/Search this post with:
A name, residential address, and (preferably residential) telephone number is required from readers who comment on ODT Online. These details will not be visible to site visitors.