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Eitan Biran’s maternal grandfather Shmulik Peleg. Photo: AP

Israel court rules boy who survived cable car crash be returned to family in Italy

  • Fourteen people, including Eitan Biran’s parents and younger brother, died when a gondola plunged to the ground in May
  • Last month, while visiting the boy in Italy, his maternal grandfather flew him without permission to Israel
Israel
An Israeli court ruled on Monday that a six-year-old boy, the sole survivor of an Italian cable car disaster and the focus of a cross-border custody battle, must be returned to relatives in Italy after his grandfather took him to the Middle Eastern country.

Eitan Biran had been living with his paternal aunt Aya Biran in Italy after his parents, younger brother and 11 other people died when a gondola plunged to the ground in northern Italy in May.

Last month, while visiting the boy, his maternal grandfather, without the aunt’s consent, drove him to Switzerland and from there chartered a private jet to Israel.

Aya Biran, the boy’s aunt, said that according to The Hague Convention on the return of abducted children, this amounted to kidnapping and petitioned a family court in Tel Aviv for the child’s return.

Emergency brake on Italian cable car that killed 14 was disabled, police say

The court on Monday determined that the boy’s “regular residence” was in Italy, and that he had lived there since his parents had moved from Israel when he was about a month old.

It dismissed Shmulik Peleg’s argument that because his parents had intended to return from Italy, Israel should be considered his home.

The court ordered Peleg to pay around US$20,000 in expenses and lawyer fees.

The Israeli ruling said an Italian court had granted the boy’s aunt guardianship rights, enabling her to argue successfully that his transfer to Israel by the grandfather had violated The Hague Convention.

Aya Biran, paternal aunt of Eitan Biran. Photo: AFP

The Tel Aviv court said it still hoped the rift between the families could be mended.

“The boy is the only survivor of the cable car accident and the message of his late parents’ ‘spiritual will’ would be for their families to set the right path on which the boy can tread peacefully and safely between them,” it said.

The boy’s maternal family in Israel said it plans to appeal the decision. The court ruling dealt only with the issue of how Biran was taken out of Italy, without considering what was best for his future, they said in a statement.

“Sadly, the options and solutions that were raised regarding the minor’s connection with both families were not fully exhausted,” they said.

“The family is determined to continue to fight in all possible ways for the good of Eitan, his well-being, and his right to grow up in Israel as his parents wished.”

Biran’s paternal relatives welcomed the ruling in a statement, saying “there are no victors and no vanquished, no winners and no losers.”

“There is only Eitan. All that we ask now is that Eitan returns home quickly, to friends and to school, to his family and especially to the therapeutic and educational frameworks that he needs.”

Additional reporting by Associated Press

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