Dutch teenage sailor gets green light from mother

July 17, 2010 02:56 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 06:47 am IST

Laura Dekker arrives to board a flight at the Princess Juliana International Airport on the Caribbean island of St. Maarten in the Netherlands Antilles in this December 21, 2009 file photo. AP.

Laura Dekker arrives to board a flight at the Princess Juliana International Airport on the Caribbean island of St. Maarten in the Netherlands Antilles in this December 21, 2009 file photo. AP.

The Hague, Netherlands The mother of a 14—year—old Dutch girl who wants to sail solo around the world said in an open letter published on Saturday she has given up her opposition to her daughter’s planned trip.

Laura Dekker’s dream of becoming the youngest person to sail alone around the globe has been thwarted by a Dutch court that last year made her a ward of the state amid concerns over her physical ability and her social development if she is isolated and out of school for months.

Dekker’s mother, Babs Mueller, wrote in an open letter published in the Algemeen Dagblad newspaper that she no longer opposes the voyage.

“I know she can do it, she’s a strong girl who does not give up easily,” Ms. Mueller wrote. “Of course no mother on earth likes it if her daughter goes to sea alone. I will have sleepless nights from the worry, but this is about Laura and how I can help her.”

Last year, Ms. Mueller told another Dutch paper, De Volkskrant, that she opposed her daughter’s trip.

Dekker is due in court on Tuesday for a hearing on whether she should remain a ward of the state.

Ms. Mueller also wrote that she has lost faith in child care agencies monitoring Dekker.

“Laura isn’t a criminal, she just wants to sail,” she wrote.

The dangers Dekker faces were highlighted last month when a 16—year—old California girl, Abby Sunderland, ran into trouble on a solo attempt when powerful waves snapped her mast in the Indian Ocean, prompting a tense 20—hour rescue mission.

Sunderland was rescued two days after the alarm was raised, in a land and sea operation that cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, much of it borne by the Australian military who spotted her thousands of miles from the nearest land.

Last month, Dekker’s lawyer Peter de Lange argued that she has been working to meet 14 conditions imposed by the court nine months ago.

She has obtained a first aid diploma, practiced functioning with a lack of sleep, and arranged to follow schoolwork via Internet, he said.

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