A desperate
father has told of how he resorted to hiring a special forces soldier
to help him retrieve his daughter when the girl was snatched by his
ex-wife and taken to Poland.
Craig
Michael, 35, said he spent months planning the operation after being
forced to take drastic action when his pleas for help from the
authorities fell on deaf ears.
His
ex-wife, Marta Swinarska, had taken the couple's five-year-old daughter
Crystal from their home in Cyprus and fled to her native Poland - later
ignoring two court orders to return her.
According to the Daily Mirror, Mr Michael spent two-and-a-half years and £35,000 trying to get his daughter back but to no avail.
As
a last resort he hired a child recovery expert and spoke of the
dramatic moment the pair found Crystal and reunited her with her older
sister Castalia, six.
Mr
Michael picked his youngest daughter up and whisked her away in a
waiting car while his soldier accomplice used pepper spray to ward off
the little girl's grandfather.
The trio then drove across the border to the Czech Republic and on to Austria before flying home.
Though
his dramatic rescue may have looked like an abduction to onlookers, Mr
Michael insisted that everything he did was legal because he had a court
order.
The
father-of-two, who is originally from north London but emigrated to
Cyprus in 2005, told the Daily Mirror: 'It's extreme but the court and
the Hague Convention had let me down.'
Mr
Michael's ordeal began in October 2011 when Ms Swinarska told him she
had to return to Poland because her grandfather had died.
He said he would look after the children while she was away but that Ms Swinarska wanted to take them with her.
Not
long after, his ex-wife disappeared with Crystal, sending Mr Michael
into a panic and leading to both children being put on a stop list in an
attempt to prevent Ms Swinarska from leaving the country with them.
Mr Michael claims she also tried to take Castalia a week later but the girl's school wouldn't allow it and contacted her father.
He then went through the Hague Convention in an attempt to secure Crystal's return and the case came to court in January 2012.
Ms
Swinarska claimed she had taken her daughter because her partner
misused drugs and alcohol and was both physically and mentally abusive
to her and the children - allegations that Mr Michael vehemently denies.
'It's
absolute nonsense,' Mr Michael told the Daily Mirror. 'She made up all
sorts of things to try to put me in a bad light but the judge could see
through her lies.'
The judge found no evidence in her accusations and issued a court order stating that Crystal be returned to her father.
When Ms
Swinarska failed to adhere to the ruling a second court order was
issued eight months later for Crystal to be forcibly removed - only
Polish authorities said they were unable to find her.
It
was then that Mr Michael turned to Adam Whittington, the founder and
chief executive of Child Abduction Recovery International.
The pair flew to Poland In January 2014 and managed to locate Crystal at her grandparent's home in Opole, southern Polanhttps
They spent 12 days waiting for the perfect opportunity to put their plan into action until finally that moment arose.
Jumping out from behind some bushes, Mr Michael grabbed his daughter and ran to a waiting car before making his escape.
In May this year Ms Swinarska pleaded guilty to child abduction and was given an 18-month suspended sentence.
She still maintains she took Crystal because her husband was 'aggressive' and is continuing to fight for custody.
Mr Michael's story will be featured in an ITV documentary called Abduction next week.
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