A 13-year-old Dutch girl's attempt to become the youngest person to sail solo around the globe was blocked today by a court which placed her under state supervision for two months.
Laura Dekker, an experienced sailor who was born at sea on her parents' boat in New Zealand, had planned to set sail on a two-year voyage on September 1st on her 8.3-metre yacht Guppy.
Child-protection authorities argued it would be irresponsible to let her depart, and the court in Utrecht agreed, saying the trip would put Ms Dekker's psychological development at risk. She will remain with her parents, who will share custody with the state.
The court voiced "serious concerns" about Ms Dekker's mental and physical development on the boat, and ordered a psychologist and child protection authorities to examine how she would cope with loneliness, sea winds and lack of schooling, as well as her general physical safety.
Ms Dekker's lawyer, Peter de Lange, said he was confident the issue could be resolved and that her trip would go ahead.
"She is happy with the ruling, and now we can prepare this [journey] in a mature and responsible way," De Lange said, adding that Ms Dekker was out sailing today.
The girl, whose parents support her trip, had warned prior to the ruling she would emigrate to New Zealand, where can also claim citizenship, if the court prevented her from attempting the voyage. But Dutch newspaper De Volkskrantreported her New Zealand passport had expired.
On Thursday, British 17-year-old Mike Perham became the youngest person to sail around the globe single-handed after spending nine months at sea, eclipsing the record set by American Zac Sunderland last month.
Reuters