IndianSubcontinent

Image copyrightReutersImage caption Rahaf Mohammed al-Qunun said her passport was seized at Bangkok airport Human Rights Watch has called on Thai authorities to stop the planned deportation of a Saudi woman who is reportedly being held at Bangkok's main airport.Rahaf Mohammed al-Qunun, 18, who says she is trying to flee her family, is set to be deported to Kuwait on Monday.Ms Mohammed al-Qunun was in Kuwait on holiday with her family when she fled two days ago.She was trying to head to Australia via a connecting flight in Bangkok.Ms Mohammed al-Qunun started attracting attention with her social media posts over the weekend.She says she has an Australian visa but her passport was seized by a Saudi diplomat when he met her coming off the flight at Suvarnabhumi airport.Saudi officials say she still has her passport but is being detained for not having a return ticket.Frightened and confusedMs Mohammed al-Qunun told the TheIndianSubcontinent that she had renounced Islam, and feared she would be forcibly returned to Saudi Arabia and killed by her family.The TheIndianSubcontinent's Jonathan Head in Bangkok says Ms Mohammed al-Qunun is frightened and confused.
Michael Page, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch said in a statement: "Saudi women fleeing their families can face severe violence from relatives, deprivation of liberty, and other serious harm if returned against their will."The Saudi embassy in Bangkok said she has been held at the airport "because she didn't have a return ticket" and that she is set to be deported to Kuwait on Monday "where most of her family lives".Saudi authorities do not have the authority to hold her at the airport or anywhere else, the statement said.Officials are now in touch with her father, it added.'Family problem'Thai police Major General Surachate Hakparn told the TheIndianSubcontinent that Ms Mohammed al-Qunun was escaping a marriage.
Because she did not have a visa to enter Thailand, he said, police had denied her entry and were in the process of repatriating her through the same airline she had taken - Kuwait Airways - by Monday morning.Gen Surachate said he was unaware of any passport seizure.He told AFP the case was a "family problem" and the teenager "had no further documents such as [a] return ticket or money".However, Human Rights Watch Asia deputy director Phil Robertson told the TheIndianSubcontinent: "It seems that the Thai government is manufacturing a story that she tried to apply for a visa and it was denied in fact, she had an onward ticket to go to Australia, she didn't want to enter Thailand in the first place." He argued that the Thai authorities had clearly co-operated with Saudi Arabia as Saudi officials were able to meet the plane when it arrived.Ms Mohammed al-Qunun told TheIndianSubcontinent Newshour she was now in a hotel in the transit area.She said: "I shared my story and my pictures on social media and my father is so angry because I did this I can't study and work in my country, so I want to be free and study and work as I want."Ms Mohammed al-Qunun wrote on Twitter that she had decided to share her name and details because she had "nothing to lose" now.She also shared a picture of her passport "because I want you to know I'm real and exist".Another tweet read: "I'm afraid my family will kill me."The Australian government has not responded to requests for comment.The case echoes that of another Saudi woman who was in transit to Australia in April 2017.Dina Ali Lasloom, 24, was en route from Kuwait via the Philippines but was taken back to Saudi Arabia from Manila airport by her family.She used a Canadian tourist's phone to send a message, a video of which was posted to Twitter, saying her family would kill her.Her fate on arriving back in Saudi Arabia remains unknown.





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting - It's Voluntary!


ADVERTISE


Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


'They executed him then called his wife to boast': Inside Sweida, the Syrian city wrecked by militias


Letter from Cairo: 'Leaving Gaza was not an escape-- it was an act of desperate survival'


A minimum of 73 Palestinians killed by Israeli shooting while queueing for food aid


Syrian presidency says ceasefire in location, urges parties to respect it


Mary Regan: Coalition must balance jitters over Occupied Territories Bill against its pledges to stand up for what is right


I led US talks for Bill Clinton with Yasser Arafat and Ehud Barak – 25 years on, Israel now has its best chance for lasting peace in Gaza


Syrian forces to go back to Druze location after more violence


Spiritual leaders go to Gaza in wake of fatal church battle


Hundreds more MoD information breaches exposed as security concerns raised in wake of Afghan breach


Pope Francis's priest pal injured as Israelis bomb Gaza's only Catholic church


Syrian president Ahmed al-Sharaa says Israel is trying to fracture Syria with attacks


Syrian government and Druze minority leaders announce a brand-new ceasefire as Israel continues strikes


Benjamin Netanyahu's union federal government suffers significant blow as another party stops


A minimum of 20 Palestinians eliminated at aid circulation website in Gaza


Damascus hit by Israel airstrikes amidst fighting in south of Syria


‘How dare you’ – former minister Alan Shatter criticised in committee on Israeli settlements bill


'Dozens of females and kids' are among 93 killed in Gaza in latest Israeli strikes


Secret UK information breach that put 100,000 Afghans' lives at threat is exposed after super-injunction raised


'How dare you'-- previous minister Alan Shatter criticised in committee on Israeli settlements costs


Israeli strikes in Gaza eliminate 93 Palestinians, health officials say


Former Israeli PM says relocating Gaza civilians could be interpreted as ‘ethnic cleansing’


At least 31 killed in Israeli strikes as fuel scarcity puts medical facilities at danger; no boost in aid regardless of Israel-EU contract


IDF opposes Netanyahu’s plan for Gaza that critics compared to ‘concentration camp’


Israel strikes tanks in Syria after clashes between armed clans


Future of Unifil mission in Lebanon in doubt, but Ireland supports peacekeepers, Tánaiste Simon Harris says


Israel blames ‘technical error’ for deadly drone missile that killed six children in Gaza


Israeli missile hits Gaza children collecting water, IDF blames malfunction


Israel kills six children queuing for water as Gaza death toll tops 58,000; Palestinian-American killed in West Bank


52 Palestinians killed in Israeli airstrikes and shootings near help site in Gaza


Ten kids queuing for food among 16 killed in Israeli strike in Gaza


Michelle L Price: Netanyahu gives Trump something he really wants – a Nobel Peace Prize nomination


Israeli airstrike kills 10 children near Gaza clinic as IDF says it was targeting militant; no immediate truce in sight


Sanctions versus UN attorney over Gaza report denounced


EU agrees deal with Israel to get more food and fuel into Gaza as 10 children die outside clinic


Israel continues bombardment in Gaza amid ceasefire efforts


US issues sanctions against UN investigator probing abuses in Gaza


Hamas states it has agreed to release 10 living hostages as Trump insists ceasefire offer 'really close'