Christian family sues Sweden for taking their children over faith based parenting

A Christian family—Daniel Samson and Bianca Samson—has launched a case against Sweden at the European Court of Human Rights after their two eldest daughters were taken into the custody of Swedish social-services authorities in December 2022.

The girls, aged 10 and 11 at the time, were removed following a school-reporting incident: the older daughter made an allegation of abuse against her parents after they denied her mobile-phone use and makeup privileges, and then subsequently retracted the claim. Prosecutors found no evidence of abuse and closed the investigation, yet the children have remained separated from their parents ever since.

Swedish authorities subsequently labelled the parents as “religious extremists” on the basis of their church attendance three times weekly and their restrictions on the children’s phone and makeup usage—despite these being consistent with the family’s Christian beliefs and values.

The two girls have been placed in separate foster-homes, far from each other and the family, allowed only one supervised visit per month with their parents. Meanwhile their physical and mental health has reportedly deteriorated significantly during this prolonged separation.

Having exhausted Sweden’s internal legal remedies— including a decision by the Swedish Supreme Court not to hear the case in March 2025—the Samsons now seek redress under the European Convention on Human Rights, arguing that Articles 8 (right to family life) and 9 (freedom of religion) have been violated. ADF International contends that the case exemplifies dangerous state over-reach and religious discrimination in the name of child-welfare intervention.

This case raises urgent questions about the rights of parents to direct the upbringing of their children, protect their religious convictions, and maintain family unity—especially when the only “evidence” of risk stems from lifestyle choices aligned with faith commitments rather than actual harm to the children.

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