Gulf Today

Groups express concern over deportatio­n of 19 Thai kids

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BANGKOK: Thai civil society groups voiced concern on Tuesday about the fate of 19 stateless children taken into government custody this month, saying they could be deported to neighbouri­ng Myanmar, although a minister denied any plan to do so.

The groups say the case throws a spotlight on Thailand’s lack of readiness to care for undocument­ed children, whose numbers are rising, fuelled by growing instabilit­y and violence in Myanmar, ater a military coup in 2021.

The children, aged between five and 16, have been denied access to parents and relatives since March12,whengovern­mentsocial­workerstoo­kthem from a shelter in the northern province of Chiang Rai, rights worker Nutchanart Boonkhong said.

“We saw how the government works and we are very concerned,” said Nutchanart, who set up the foundation running the shelter.

She cited a similar incident last July when 126 children, mostly belonging to ethnic minorities, were sent to Myanmar by Thai authoritie­s because they were undocument­ed, sparking an uproar by civil society groups.

“That group was deported, and it is unknown whether there was any follow-up on their welfare,” she added.

At the time, officials said they were following rules on deportatio­n ater discoverin­g numerous undocument­ed children at a public school in the central province of Ang Thong, far from the border.

But Varawut Silpa-archa, Thailand’s minister for social developmen­t and human security, denied there was any deportatio­n plan in the current case.

“All children in Thailand, regardless of their ethnicity, will be taken care of. There is no policy to send them back,” Varawut said.

The group was taken into custody over fears that a temple in the province of Lopburi was exploiting them to raise funds, he added.

Responding to the accusation, Nutchanart said the children had been spending their summer at the Lopburi temple and were not abused.

Thailand is home to hundreds of thousands of stateless people, whose families criss-crossed porous borders in the remote hills between southern China, Myanmar and Laos for generation­s before arriving in the country.

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