The New Zealand Herald

Saudi runaway held at hotel

- Grant Peck and Aya Batrawy

A Saudi woman used social media to draw attention to her plight trying to flee her family, claiming that authoritie­s in Thailand confiscate­d her passport and were holding her at an airport hotel room in Bangkok.

Rahaf Mohammed Alqunun, 18, began posting on Twitter after Thai authoritie­s stopped her in transit from Kuwait. She claims to have a visa for Australia, where she appears to have been planning to seek asylum. On Twitter, she wrote of being in “real danger” if forced to return to her family under pressure from Saudi authoritie­s. She also posted a copy of her passport to provide evidence of her identity.

For runaway Saudi women, fleeing can be a matter of life and death, and they are almost always doing so to escape male relatives.

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.

“I am giving my family 48 hours (to) either stop or I will publish everything that will incriminat­e them,” she wrote on Twitter.

AP reached Alqunun by telephone in her hotel room where she spoke briefly, saying that someone took her passport after telling her she could get a visa for Thailand. She said an hour later, several people came and told her they knew she had run away, that her family wants her and she should return to Saudi Arabia.

Alqunun told Human Rights Watch that she arrived at Suvarnabhu­mi Airport in Bangkok from Kuwait, but that a diplomat from the Saudi Embassy in Bangkok seized

her passport to prevent her travelling to Australia. Saudi and Thai officials then told her she would be returned to Kuwait, 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.

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 runaway said often the women are young, inexperien­ced and unprepared for the obstacles and risks involved in seeking asylum. 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. In others local authoritie­s suspect them of seeking asylum and deport them.

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

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