Home Asia Thai PM Urges To Uphold Rights Amid Uyghur Deportation Concerns

Thai PM Urges To Uphold Rights Amid Uyghur Deportation Concerns

Thailand's political leadership wants to deport the Uyghurs to China, despite warnings from its agencies that the move posed a security risk and would breach human rights principles.
Thailand's Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra looks on during a signing ceremony and press conference at the Government House, in Bangkok, Thailand, November 28, 2024. REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha/ File Photo

Thailand’s prime minister emphasised the need to uphold international standards and human rights after activists raised concerns over the secret deportation of 48 Uyghurs to China after more than a decade in detention.

Last month United Nations human rights experts had urged Thailand not to send the 48 Uyghurs back to China, warning they were at risk of torture, ill-treatment and “irreparable harm” if returned.

Concerns Over Repatriation

On Thursday, China’s official Xinhua news agency said Thailand, acting in line with both nations’ laws, had repatriated 40 Chinese who had entered the Southeast Asian nation illegally, but did not specify if they were Uyghurs.

When asked about the status of the 48 Uyghurs, Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra did not confirm an extradition had taken place in remarks delivered before the Xinhua report, saying she had yet to discuss the issue with officials.

“This sort of issue, for any country, one has to follow the law, international process and human rights,” she told reporters, without elaborating.

Thailand’s immigration police, China’s foreign ministry and its embassy in Bangkok did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Thursday.

Uyghur Deportations

Early on Thursday, several trucks with windows covered in black tape were seen leaving the Bangkok immigration centre where the 48 Uyghurs had been held, images accompanying domestic media reports showed.

A few hours later, at 4.48 a.m., an unscheduled China Southern Airlines flight left the Don Mueang airport in the Thai capital to land six hours later in Kashgar in China’s Xinjiang region, tracker Flightradar24 showed.

Rights groups accuse Beijing of widespread abuses of Uyghurs, a mainly Muslim ethnic minority that numbers around 10 million in the western region of Xinjiang. Beijing denies any abuses.

The Cross Cultural Foundation, a Thai human rights group, said it would petition a court on Thursday for an immediate inquiry to compel officials to testify on the status of the Uyghurs and present the detainees.


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Security Risk

In Thursday’s report, Xinhua said the 40 repatriated Chinese had been “bewitched by criminal organisations” and were stranded in Thailand.

It said their families had repeatedly asked the Chinese government to assist in their return.

The 48 Uyghurs held in Thailand were part of a group of 300 who fled China and were arrested in 2014. Some were sent back to China and others to Turkey, with the rest kept in Thai custody.

Thailand’s government has recently said there was no immediate plan to deport them, although it had not ruled out their return.

The political leadership wants to deport the Uyghurs to China, despite warnings from its agencies that the move posed a security risk and would breach human rights principles, said a Thai security official, who sought anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

July 2015 Deportations

Some diplomats and security analysts believe Thailand’s deportation of 100 Uyghurs to China in July 2015 led to the bombing a month later of a busy Bangkok shrine that killed 20 people in the worst attack of its kind on Thai soil.

Thailand was widely condemned for the deportation of the 100 Uyghurs, amid international concern that they could be tortured. Their fate is unknown.

Thai authorities at the time concluded the shrine attack was linked to their crackdown on a human trafficking ring, without specifically linking the group to the Uyghurs.

Two ethnic Uyghur men were arrested, and charged with murder and illegal possession of explosives and their trial is proceeding, despite repeated delays.

(With inputs from Reuters)