no
If he was responsible for over 50% of the cost of the child, he can claim the child as a dependent. That would mean that no one else was entitled to claim the child, including the father and mother.
Yes, a mother South Africa can get an arrest warrant for a father living in another country if he stops paying for child support.
To claim a child as a dependent on your taxes, the child must have lived with you and you must have provided support for over 50% of the year. So the mother in this case can claim her grandson on her taxes if she supported the child for at least 183 days out of the year, regardless of whether or not the mother of the child owes back child support.
If the judgement is a court order, then the court will order her arrest and have the child removed from her. The court may then impose tougher orders.
A mother's love for her child will continue no matter what the child has done. The parent can hate what the child has done and what the child has become while still loving the child. Real love is not earned or dependent on anything, it is freely given and knows bounds.
This will depend on a number of factors, particularly the child's age, the reason for the arrest, and what you mean by "force." For example, taking a pre-schooler out of bed to watch the police arrest his father for an outstanding parking ticket, abusive. Having a teenager present when the police arrest a parent for spousal abuse, not abusive. Emotional abuse is dependent on the circumstances, the motives of the parent, and the anticipated/actual effect on the child.
Claiming a dependent is not dependent on the child support issue but rather on the amount of time the child spends with each parent.
That is dependent on agreement, state law, their differences in income, the needs of the parties and other factors.
That would be dependent on the specific state. In California it would be considered a deductible item in the calculation. See link But, all child support is rebuttable
This is dependent on whether it is voluntary or due to denial of access, as happens in 60% of the cases.
No, you cannot file a 1099-MISC for your dependent child.
a dependant child?