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Saudi woman seeking asylum barricades herself in Thailand

BANGKOK, Jan 7:  A Saudi woman who says she is fleeing abuse by her family and wants asylum in Australia barricaded herself in an airport hotel in the Thai capital on Monday and was sending out desperate pleas for help over social media.
By Associated Press

BANGKOK, Jan 7:  A Saudi woman who says she is fleeing abuse by her family and wants asylum in Australia barricaded herself in an airport hotel in the Thai capital on Monday and was sending out desperate pleas for help over social media.


Rahaf Mohammed Alqunun began posting on Twitter late Saturday after her passport was taken away when she arrived in Bangkok on a flight from Kuwait. The 18-year-old has been appealing for aid from the United Nations refugee agency and anyone else who can help.


The office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, UNHCR, issued a statement saying it was following the case and “trying to seek access from the Thai authorities” to meet with Alqunun to assess her need for international protection.


On Twitter, where Alqunun has accumulated tens of thousands of followers in about a day-and-a-half, she wrote of being in “real danger” if forced to return to her family under pressure from Saudi authorities, and has claimed in media interviews that she could be killed.


Alqunun told Human Rights Watch she was fleeing abuse from her family, including beatings and death threats from her male relatives who forced her to remain in her room for six months for cutting her hair.


For runaway Saudi women — to whom Saudi law grants male relatives legal guardianship even if they are adults — fleeing can be a matter of life and death, and they are almost always doing so to escape male relatives.


“Thailand should allow UNHCR to have access to her. They should allow UNHCR to make a determination whether she is a refugee or not and abide by that,” said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director for Human Rights Watch.


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“Alternatively, Thailand could let her continue to Australia, give her back her passport and make sure she is able to go. She has a valid Australian visa,” he told The Associated Press. “The key thing is she should not be sent back to Saudi Arabia, she should not be sent back into harm’s way”


Alqunun appeared to have scored a small victory on Monday when the flight on which she said she would be sent to Kuwait departed without her. And shortly after noon Monday, the Germany’s ambassador to Thailand, Georg Schmidt, posted a message of concern on his verified Twitter account about her case, which he said he was conveying to Thai authorities.


The Associated Press reached Alqunun by telephone Sunday night in her hotel room and she spoke briefly, saying that she was tricked into giving up her passport on her arrival in Bangkok.


“Someone told me he would help me get a visa for Thailand, so I can go inside,” she said “After that he took my passport. After one hour he came with five or four persons and told me my family wants me. And they knew I had run away and should go back to Saudi Arabia.”


She has identified the man who took her passport variously as a Kuwait Airways employee or a Saudi Embassy official. She said Saudi and Thai officials then told her she would be returned to Kuwait on Monday, where her father and brother are awaiting her.


Saudi Arabia’s charge d’affaires in Bangkok Abdullah al-Shuaibi denied Saudi authorities were involved in any way.


He was quoted in Saudi press saying that Alqunun was stopped by Thai authorities because she did not appear to have a return ticket, a hotel reservation or itinerary to show she was a tourist. He said the Saudi Embassy has no authority to stop anyone at the airport and that this decision rests with Thai officials.


“She was stopped by airport authorities because she violated Thai laws,” he was quoted as saying in Sabq, a state-aligned Saudi news website.


“The embassy is only monitoring the situation,” al-Shuaibi said.


Thai officials were not immediately available Monday for comment.


Alqunun’s plight mirrors that of other Saudi women who have tried to flee abusive or restrictive family conditions.


A Saudi activist familiar with other cases of females who’ve run away said often the women are young, inexperienced and unprepared for the obstacles and risks involved in seeking asylum when they attempt to flee.


Speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of repercussion, the activist said there have been instances where Saudi women runaways were stopped by authorities in Hong Kong or the Philippines en route to Australia or New Zealand. In some cases, Saudi authorities have been involved in forcing women to return to their families and in other cases local authorities suspect the women of seeking asylum and deport them.


Alqunun appears to have attempted to flee while on a family visit to Kuwait.


Saudi Arabia requires that a woman have the consent of a male relative - usually a father or husband - to obtain a passport, travel abroad or marry.


Saudi women runaways, however, have increasingly turned to social media to amplify their calls for help.


In 2017, Dina Lasloom triggered a firestorm online when she was stopped en route to Australia where she planned to seek asylum. She was forced to return to Saudi Arabia and was not publicly heard from again, according to activists tracking her whereabouts.

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