⟡ SWANK Evidentiary Catalogue
Filed date: 17 July 2025
Reference Code: SWANK-VISIT-CAT01
PDF Filename: 2025-07-17_SWANK_Request_VisitationWithPanda.pdf
1-Line Summary: Regal’s request for contact with the family cat Panda reflects deep attachment, continuity of care, and emotional truth — not novelty.
I. What Happened
During the contact session on 17 July 2025, Regal Chromatic made a clear and spontaneous request to visit the family’s cat, Panda, affectionately known as Kitty-Witty. This was not a flippant or superficial comment. It was a gentle but profound appeal for reconnection with the home-based world from which he and his siblings were forcibly removed.
This is not about a cat.
This is about belonging.
II. What the Complaint Establishes
This request establishes:
That attachment to the family cat is part of the children's stable emotional ecosystem
That enforced separation from familiar, loving environments (including non-human family members) constitutes emotional deprivation
That Regal’s emotional intelligence is being suppressed by institutional conditions where even affection is rationed
This is not a minor wish. It is evidence.
III. Why SWANK Logged It
Because the legal system so often fails to recognise the subtle and sacred in child welfare — and a child’s longing for a cat becomes a radical act of continuity.
Because this request is a protected expression under Article 8 ECHR:
“Private and family life includes the development of personal identity, home environment, and emotional continuity.”
Because, as Bromley’s Family Law confirms:
“The continuity of relationships and emotional bonds must be treated with the same legal weight as material needs.”
Because the suppression of these everyday bonds is not neutral — it is institutionalised emotional neglect masquerading as bureaucratic efficiency.
IV. Violations
ECHR Article 8 – Unlawful interference with private life and emotional identity
Article 3 UNCRC – Failure to prioritise the child’s best interests in contact arrangements
Article 12 UNCRC – Failure to meaningfully respond to a child's stated wishes
Safeguarding Misapplication – Disregarding non-verbal indicators of wellbeing like pet attachment
Welfare-Based Neglect – Failing to offer compassionate accommodation that includes emotional anchors like Panda
V. SWANK’s Position
This is not a request for a petting zoo.
This is a constitutional critique in whiskers and tail.
The local authority must recognise, accommodate, and preserve the emotional ecosystem of these children. Visitation with Panda / Kitty-Witty is an act of emotional restoration, not indulgence.
Regal’s request is valid, therapeutic, and legally significant. Any refusal to consider this request as part of broader family contact is not only callous — it is a failure of safeguarding imagination.
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