Canada open for fleeing Saudi woman: media report
Canada has signalled it will be open to accepting a Saudi woman who reportedly fled her family over abuse and barricaded herself in a Bangkok airport hotel for seeking asylum, according to local media Wednesday.
CTV said that Canadian authorities have indicated that they would be open for the 18-year-old woman named Rahaf Mohammed al-Qunun, who has asked Canada for help via her Twitter account.
Qunun grabbed global attention when she sent out pleas for help via social media in Bangkok last Saturday.
Upon arriving at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi Airport Saturday night, Qunun said she was met by a man whom she identified at various times. The man took her passport and said he would help her gain entry to Thailand.
When the man returned about an hour later with a few other people, they said they knew she ran away and her family wanted her back to Saudi Arabia. She was sent to a hotel room and told she would be put on a Monday morning flight to Kuwait.
Qunun then went online for help over Twitter, writing of being in "real danger" if forced to return to her family in Saudi Arabia and might be killed. She told the BBC that she had renounced Islam and was fearful of her father's retaliation.
She was allowed to enter Thailand temporarily under the protection of the UN refugee agency, which is expected to take about 5 to 7 days to study her case and her claim for asylum.
Her father has reportedly denied physically abusing her or trying to force her into an arranged marriage. He said he wants Qunun back but respects her decision.
The Canada-Saudi Arabia relations have soured after a diplomatic row which was sparked by the Canadian government's call for the immediate release of Saudi blogger Raif Badawi and his sister Samar via Twitter on Aug 5, 2018.
In response, Saudi Arabia accused Canada of interfering in its internal affairs and expelled the Canadian ambassador to Saudi Arabia and recalled its own ambassador from Ottawa.