They take them to Lebanon, because they know the mothers will never be looked on favourably there.
But there are other places as well, Egypt, North Africa and the Middle East, New York, New Zealand, the UK.
Australia has the highest rate per capita of international parental child abductions in the world –two or three children taken illegally in or out of the country by a parent every single week.
The Australian reports that of the 114 children removed from Australia in the last financial year in custody disputes only 54 have been returned.
That’s 60 children taken by a parent – under circumstances we can’t imagine – who remain unable to be reunited with their Australian parent.
Over the past two weeks we have watched the case of Sally Faulkner play out before our eyes. We have watched her pain, her anguish and the extreme length she went to to try – and fail – to have her children returned.
But her case is far from isolated – and her failure to have her children returned is far from unusual.
As in the case of Sally Faulkner Lebanon is a popular choice – especially for fathers who take their own children – as it is not a signatory to the Hague Convention.
Sally Faulkner's ex-husband now has custody of their children. Via Nine News and Facebook.
Rosa Saladino a lawyer who specialises in the field of child abduction told the ABC last year that if both countries involved in the case are signatories to the Hague Convention, there are legal avenues for the remaining parent to have their child returned.
But in the case of countries that are not a signatory, the legal avenues for getting a child returned are much harder.
"There is some assistance offered by the Commonwealth Government, there's a scheme of financial assistance to assist with payment of the legal fees," she said.