Court Rules No Solo Sailing for Dutch Sailor Girl

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28 August 2009

A court in the Netherlands has ruled that 13-year-old Laura Dekker
cannot sail around the world by herself next month as she'd hoped and
has put her in the temporary care of Dutch authorities while it makes a
final decision.


For
the moment, Laura Dekker's dream of becoming the youngest person to
sail solo around the globe has been put on hold. She was not in court,
but her father was present for the judges' decision.

Citing
potential harm to her development, judges ruled that Laura could still
live at home but only under court supervision while an independent
child psychologist assesses whether she's able to make the two-year
journey.

Laura, who has the support of her parents, had hoped
to set sail next month but she now has to wait until at least the end
of October when judges will make their final decision based on the
child expert's report. The court stopped short of taking custody away
from Laura's father as child protection workers had wanted.

They
had argued that the trip was far too dangerous for a young teenager to
make on her own - from the physical dangers and pirate-infested waters,
to emotional isolation and even missed school. Laura dismissed those
arguments, saying she would do her schoolwork via e-mail and rest in
ports to avoid bad weather.

The experienced sailor wants to
sail her 26-foot boat, called Guppy, through the Canary Islands, the
Caribbean, Australia and Sri Lanka before returning to Dutch shores in
2011. Just this Thursday, a 17-year-old English boy broke the record
Laura's aiming for when he sailed into Cornwall after 282 days at sea
and became the youngest person to sail around the globe by himself.
Laura may still make her goal, but for now, her story is one of a dream
deferred.