Rahaf al-Qunun: Saudi Woman Ends Airport Hotel Standoff
An
18-year-old Saudi woman who fled her family at the weekend has left Bangkok
airport "under the care" of the UN refugee agency, the head of
Thailand's immigration police says.
Thai
immigration officials had tried to return Rahaf Mohammed al-Qunun, 18, to
Kuwait, where her family is.
But she
refused to board a flight on Monday and barricaded herself into her airport
hotel room.
She said she
feared her family would kill her as she had renounced Islam.
"My
brothers and family and the Saudi embassy will be waiting for me in
Kuwait," Ms Mohammed al-Qunun told Reuters.
"My
life is in danger. My family threatens to kill me for the most trivial
things."
Her
relatives have not commented on her claims.
Rights
groups including Human Rights Watch have expressed grave concerns for Ms
Mohammed al-Qunun, who had travelled to Thailand for a connecting flight to
Australia, where she hoped to seek asylum.
The Thai
authorities said her status would be assessed by the UN refugee agency (UNHCR).
On Monday
evening local time, Thailand's chief of immigration police Surachate Hakparn
confirmed that Ms Mohammed al-Qunun was "allowed to stay", and that
she "left the airport with the UNHCR".
He earlier
said the country would "take care of her as best we can", adding:
"She is now under the sovereignty of Thailand; no-one and no embassy can
force her to go anywhere.
"Thailand
is a land of smiles. We will not send anyone to die."
Mr Surachate
said he would meet Saudi diplomats on Tuesday to clarify Thailand's decision.
Ms Mohammed
al-Qunun tweeted that her father had arrived, "which worried and scared me
a lot", but said she felt safe "under UNHCR protection with the
agreement of Thailand authorities".
Thailand is
not a signatory to the UN Refugee Convention and provides no legal protection
to asylum seekers although there are more than 100,000 refugees in the country.
An
injunction filed by Thai lawyers in Bangkok criminal court to stop the
deportation was dismissed earlier on Monday.
Ms Mohammed
al-Qunun says that when she arrived in Bangkok on Saturday, her passport was
seized by a Saudi diplomat who met her coming off the flight.
Thailand
initially said she was being deported because she did not meet the requirements
for a Thai visa.
However, Ms
Mohammed al-Qunun insisted she had a visa for Australia, and that she never
wanted to stay in Thailand.
Saudi Arabia
said the Thai authorities had stopped the young woman for "violating the
law".
On Monday,
police chief Mr Surachate said the Thais had been tipped off by Saudi
officials, adding: "The Saudi Arabia embassy contacted the immigration
police... and said that the girl had run away from her parents and they feared
for her safety."
Phil
Robertson, deputy Asia director for Human Rights Watch, told the BBC: "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."
Ms Mohammed
al-Qunun drew attention to her plight through social media posts over the
weekend. She also gave a friend, Noura, access to her Twitter account, saying
it was in case anything should happen to her.
"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," she said.
Women in
Saudi Arabia are subject to male guardianship laws, which mean they need a male
relative's permission to work, travel, marry, open a bank account, or even
leave prison.
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 has
asked for asylum from governments around the world.
Ms Mohammed
al-Qunun told the BBC that she had renounced Islam, and feared her family would
kill her if she was sent back to Saudi Arabia.
Freedom of
religion is not legally protected in the kingdom, and people who convert to
another religion from Islam risk being charged with apostasy - or abandoning
their religious beliefs.
The crime is
legally punishable by death - although courts have not carried out a death
sentence in recent years.
The BBC
World Service spoke to Noura, the friend who is tweeting from Ms Mohammed
al-Qunun's account. She said the pair knew each other from an online group for
Saudi feminists, and that she herself had "escaped" Saudi Arabia
because she is "an ex-Muslim".
Noura says
Ms Mohammed al-Qunun is a student at a Saudi university, and that she believes
her father works for the Saudi government.
"Her
family kept her alone in the house for - I think for more than six months -
because she cut her hair," she told the BBC.
Noura said
she was speaking to Ms Mohammed al-Qunun "every 20 minutes", adding:
"She is terrified."
Ms Mohammed
al-Qunun's 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.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-
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