"She was thinking about study here. I explain about the future,this country,I want to stay with her and not go back to Bahrain,that's why I explain about the future[in] this country,it's good future for us. That's why she decided to stay in Australia."She smiles and nods.
Sayed Ahmed Alwadaei had been at the forefront of the February 2011 protests in Bahrain,and was detained in March that year for six months. Eventually freed,he began protesting again but after six months fled to London,where he sought asylum. At the time,Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim al-Khalifa,a member of Bahrain's ruling family,was president of the country's football association. Later,he would become president of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC),and a vice-president of soccer's international governing body,the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA).
In October 2015,Sheikh Salman made a bid for the FIFA presidency. Alwadaei began researching his role targeting athletes involved in Bahrain's anti-government protests. That led him to al-Araibi,who was slowly building his life in Australia."When Salman announced he was targeting the FIFA presidency,I began looking for footballers who suffered torture or abuse,"Alwadaei tells me via phone from London."I came across Hakeem's name,I got in touch with him and started to understand his story."
Alwadaei began teeing up media interviews for al-Araibi to talk about Sheikh Salman and his role in helping to identify and detain athletes supposedly involved in the protests that began in 2011. The first interview he can recall al-Araibi giving was with Britain's ITV News,on November 3,2015,in which he detailed the torture he received in prison in Bahrain. Subsequent interviews he gave toThe New York Times,The Guardian and to German TV had a damaging effect on Salman's FIFA candidacy. In theNYTinterview,for example,al-Araibi again detailed the torture he had endured at the hands of Bahraini authorities – and accused Salman of not assisting his lawyers and sisters,who had helped confirm his soccer match alibi.
In February 2016,Salman was beaten to the top job at FIFA by Swiss-Italian Gianni Infantino,who took over from the long-serving and controversial Sepp Blatter,though the sheikh has remained a senior vice-president.
Speaking today,al-Araibi says he was very worried about his family back in Bahrain after the interviews,but that nothing has thus far happened to them. He says he is more careful now about what he says to journalists and in posts on social media,believing the interviews he gave in 2015 and 2016 made him a marked man."Bahrain want me when I talk about Salman,2016,in Australia. This is the real case they want. Bahrain government doesn't want anyone talk against them. I been in Malaysia,I went to Thailand as well[in 2014],they didn't care about me."
He adds that in 2016,when he talked about Salman,the Bahraini authorities were taking note. They were well aware of him before he went to Thailand,he says."They want to revenge me because I talk about this person[Salman]. He want the FIFA president in 2016,he lost;this is why Bahrain government angry about me."It's a view widely shared by his supporters and friends.
At 7.50pm on November 27,2018, Jetstar flight JQ29 landed in Bangkok. Al-Araibi and his wife were on board,destined for a week-long delayed honeymoon. He chose Thailand over contenders Queensland and Bali because he'd been there before and thought it was beautiful."I want my wife to see how Thailand is a beautiful country."
Al-Araibi's wife clearly remembers the moment her husband was arrested."They came in the plane,and they take Hakeem and ask him,'You are Hakeem al-Araibi?'He say yes. They tell him,'Come with us.'
"They just have the picture,he is young,I don't know how they know him. There are maybe 20 police around us and they just take photo of us,and video."
Al-Araibi pulls out his wallet and shows me what looks like a probationary driver's licence,issued in Bahrain when he was 16. This is the photo Thai police were brandishing,he says.
Police tried to separate the couple,but they refused and eventually the police acceded,instead charging the equivalent of $150 so the couple could stay together in one of the airport's"family"cells for the first seven nights. Several further payments of $50 a pop greased the wheels so they could stay together longer,until he was sent to Bangkok Remand Prison.
It was in the airport detention centre's stark"family room",with wooden bunk beds,that al-Araibi gave his first interview as a detainee,a video call withSBS World News,on November 29."I'm a refugee in Australia now. I just want to go to Australia. I don't want to stay here,"al-Araibi said,in a refrain he would repeat dozens of times in the months to come. His country,Bahrain,"want to kill me".
Before his phone was taken away,al-Araibi managed to call Alwadaei in London. His fellow Bahraini swung into action,sending a detailed email to a host of human rights organisations including the UN High Commission for Refugees. A few weeks later,Alwadaei tracked down and shared footage of the game al-Araibi was playing in on the night he allegedly took part in the police station attack. It showed al-Araibi on the field until the end of the match,right up to and including the moment when the two teams shook hands after the game. It was a compelling argument for al-Araibi's innocence.
Twice,in those early days of detention,al-Araibi says he was told by Thai officials to buy plane tickets home to Australia for he and his wife. He did so,but twice he was stopped from leaving at the last minute by those same Thai immigration officials.
Although al-Araibi didn't know the details at the time,through December and on into January an unlikely coalition was assembling,working to apply maximum pressure on Thailand,Bahrain and FIFA to secure his freedom. On December 9,Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne weighed in,publicly calling on her Thai counterpart,Don Pramudwinai,to release al-Araibi. The request fell on deaf ears.
Al-Araibi's Bangkok-based lawyer,Nadthasiri Bergman,expected the footballer to be detained for at least six months while the extradition request made its way through the Thai legal system,but was optimistic of his eventual release."It was just a question of how long he would have to stay,"she says."It is clear there is a way out for Thailand from the beginning."
Others were not so upbeat. Professional Footballers Australia chief executive John Didulica and Brendan Schwab,the Australian Switzerland-based head of the World Players Association and a former PFA boss,were worried that with Christmas looming,al-Araibi's case could fall off the radar. On December 22,they held a press conference in Melbourne at which representatives from various human rights and football organisations spoke,along with a couple of soccer stars. One of them was former Socceroo,now SBS commentator,Craig Foster.
"Australia's footballers implore FIFA and the Asian Football Confederation to comply with their own rules of governance to demand the return of Hakeem to Australia,"Foster said."FIFA and the AFC have a constitutional obligation to not only observe the human rights of their participants but proactively promote such rights. We now implore FIFA and the AFC to live this obligation."
An urbane midfielder who played for the national team from 1996 to 2000,Foster is good-looking,eloquent and,importantly,a known,respected face. Along with the#SaveHakeem hashtag,he became the public face of the campaign. He can't recall when he first heard of the case,but proffers multiple reasons for why he became so involved."He is a fellow player,"Foster says."As a former player,and international,we have an obligation to help other generations. If we didn't stand up for him,who would? He was a refugee,which means more vulnerable and helpless than most,who had already been tortured. The thought of this occurring again was something none of us could countenance."
When he read al-Araibi's case history,"I knew he was in very deep trouble,because football would never come to his aid adequately. All acts would be superficial,designed not to damage political relationships."He includes Football Federation Australia,the Asian Football Confederation[AFC] and FIFA in that stinging assessment.
"I felt for him because he had felt safe enough in Australia to speak out against[Sheikh] Salman,at age just 23,was a very brave kid,and this had clearly rebounded on him several years later. Australia was,in part,implicated;it was clear the AFP's involvement was problematic. We owed him,in my view."
As December gave way to January 2019,another refugee,a Saudi woman namedRahaf al-Qunun,made international headlines after barricading herself in her Bangkok airport hotel room and demanding to be allowed to finish her journey to Australia,and asylum. Her case came and went in the blink of an eye. Having been detained on January 5,she was on her way to Canada and a new life by January 11,having been granted refugee status there after a global social media wave generated bad headlines for the Thai government. Afterwards,a Saudi official in Bangkok told a Thai counterpart:"I wish you had taken her phone,it would have been better than[taking] her passport,"referring to the huge number of Twitter followers al-Qunun amassed in just a few days.
Her swift success was noticed by those seeking to free al-Araibi. But as his campaign geared up,tension emerged about the best way to pursue his freedom. Australia's Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade is famously risk-averse when it comes to such high-profile consular cases,generally preferring to keep quiet and work behind the scenes. A growing number of advocates for al-Araibi were frustrated with this softly,softly approach:they felt Thailand needed the blowtorch applied,publicly;al-Qunun's case proved the point.
As Human Rights Watch's Phil Robertson,a laconic American who is fluent in Thai and who has worked in the country for decades,explains it:"There was reluctance within DFAT,not just the Australian embassy in Bangkok,to conduct the pressure campaign needed to get Hakeem released. They needed to lead the diplomatic community here. I had a senior ambassador say to me,'Someone needs to talk to them and explain what they need to do. They need to take the lead.'"
In January,Foster visited al-Araibi in prison for the first time. So,too,did the Bangkok-based Australian Evan Jones,from the Asia Pacific Refugee Rights Network,who'd heard about the case from a friend who'd shared a cell with al-Araibi in early December. Jones – who,at over 180 centimetres tall,with red hair and a thick,bushy beard,stands out like a sore thumb in Bangkok – began visiting al-Araibi regularly in prison,depositing money in his prison bank account so he had access to (slightly) better food,co-ordinating with the disparate groups working on the case and bringing journalists to prison to meet the soccer player. All up,he estimates he made 15 trips to the prison in about a month.
"I didn't know his full name,I didn't know which prison he was in – I googled'Bangkok prison'– and I didn't know what his detainee number was,"Jones explains."So I turned up,they showed me a pic and I said,'That's him.'I said he was a friend of mine. They said no worries,I went in and spoke to him 20 minutes later."
Al-Araibi doesn't mind admitting he'd never heard of either Foster or Jones until they visited him in jail. He breaks out in a big smile as he recalls the upswing in visitors after the dog days of December and early January."Evan,he told me he work with refugees,he from Australia. He work hard,I love him. He come to visit me. When he not coming,I miss him."Foster,he says,made a commitment he'll never forget."No one[else] promise me – just Craig – he promised[I will go] back to Australia. He told me he will travel to many countries to make pressure."Al-Araibi's wife chimes in:"He is a fantastic man. He told me,'Don't worry,we will fight till the end and we will do all the best.'"
FIFA and the AFC initially made anaemic statements about being"aware"of al-Araibi's situation and urging a resolution. Foster and Schwab knew they needed to apply the blowtorch to them,too. Foster was soon zigzagging around the world,to Bangkok to meet al-Araibi,and on to Zurich and Amsterdam to meet with officials from FIFA and FIFPro,the world players'union. Along the way,he lobbied for legends of the game such as Gary Lineker and Didier Drogba to lend social media support to the cause. He fronted more press conferences,began tweeting vociferously,and attended rallies like the one held on January 10 on the steps of the Sydney Opera House,at which dozens demanded al-Araibi's release. The social media momentum was all in one direction.
The PFA's John Didulica says Foster's decision to get involved was enormously consequential."Fozz was just a champion for Hakeem,he is so articulate and has such a big platform,"Didulica says."We felt that we as a football community had a duty to protect Hakeem. That's how we could distinguish Hakeem's case from others:he was a footballer,he had spoken out as a footballer against Sheikh Salman,so we had a duty to protect him."
Meanwhile,in Bangkok,Australian ambassador-designate Allan McKinnon and Chargé d'Affaires Paul Stephens had been let off the leash by Canberra. The diplomats had both met with Foster (who was also speaking directly to Marise Payne),and had the green light to begin an all-out lobbying campaign of the Thai government and other embassies once PM Scott Morrison had contacted Thai PM Prayut Chan-o-cha to directly lobby for al-Araibi's release.
By the time al-Araibi arrived at Bangkok's Ratchadaphisek court on February 4,his feet shackled,the world's media were waiting."The police inside the bus ... he told me,'When we arrive,sit and don't come with the people,I will let you come late,'"al-Araibi recalls. For a few precious seconds,as he finally stepped off the bus,the only sound he heard was the click,click,click of cameras. Finally,the silence was broken.
"Hakeem,how do you feel?"shouted a reporter."Please don't send me back to Bahrain,they will torture me,"he half-shouted back.
Foster's voice then rang out above the questions."Your wife sends her love,Australia is with you,your wife sends her love,all of Australia is with you. Be strong,buddy."
Foster had brought back to Bangkok with him Francis Awaritefe,another former Socceroo and a FIFPro vice-president. FIFA's head of sustainability,Federico Addiechi,was also in court,as were embassy representatives from not only Australia but the US,Canada,Britain,Switzerland,Germany,France,Norway,Sweden,Finland,New Zealand,Holland,Belgium and the European Union. The presence of FIFA and all those embassies underscored the diplomatic headache now faced by the Thais – one that wasn't going to go away.
For nearly an hour,as ceiling fans turned overhead,lawyers for each side went back and forth before the judge. Al-Araibi confirmed he would fight the extradition order,and his next court date was set for April 23.
As the court dispersed,the state prosecutor's office briefed incredulous journalists and embassy officials that the executive branch of government (that is,PM Prayut) had the power to intervene and set al-Araibi free at any time,if it so desired. That was enough for Australia's ambassador-designate Allan McKinnon,who walked out the door of the court room,took a lift down to the ground floor and,flanked by al-Araibi's lawyer Bergman and a phalanx of officials from other embassies,delivered a bravura performance that was way too direct to have come from any DFAT manual.
The thought of Hakeem being tortured again was something none of us could countenance.
Craig Foster
"We are asking Prime Minister Prayut to allow Hakeem al-Araibi to return to Australia,"he told reporters."He is a refugee;allow him to return to Australia to his friends and his family and the Australian community. We understand from the public announcement from the Office of the Attorney-General on Friday that there is executive authority with the Thai government to cease this case at any time. This was confirmed by the prosecutor in comments today."
The story out of court that day,accompanied by the all-important photos of al-Araibi arriving in shackles,went around the world. The BBC,CNN and al-Jazeera all ran it,as did theBangkok Post,albeit the latter with the shackles airbrushed out. As Yahya al-Hadid from the Melbourne-based Gulf Institute for Democracy and Human Rights – one of the first groups to campaign for al-Araibi's freedom – would later tell me,approximately 300,000"#SaveHakeem"tweets were sent from November 27 to February 4. After the pictures of al-Araibi in shackles were published,an estimated 1 million #SaveHakeem tweets followed,including 400,000 in Thailand alone. The footballer had gone viral.
Over the next two days,sections of the Thai government mounted a rear-guard action,attempting to publicly blame Australia for the entire mess and claiming the Red Notice had been issued by Canberra. While Australian officials had made a major mistake,few bought the Thai spin that it was all Australia's fault. Sections of the Thai government started talking to those working on al-Araibi's case,while others insisted the government's hands were tied and that the case had to play out in the courts. Rumours emerged that the royal household was looking on,alarmed.
On Saturday,February 9,Australian divers Richard Harris and Craig Challen,who had led the 2018 Thai cave rescue of a young boys'soccer team to global acclaim,wrote to the Thai PM,asking for al-Araibi's release. Over that weekend,Prayut spoke to Bahrain's PM,Khalifa bin Salman al-Khalifa,and Thai Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai was sent to Bahrain's capital,Manama,to meet with Prince Salman bin Hamad al-Khalifa,the Crown Prince,and the PM. These actions signalled to the Bahrainis that Thailand no longer wanted to be in the middle of this mess. The price was too high.
Late on Monday morning,February 11,al-Araibi was told he would be heading home to Melbourne. He didn't believe it;the Thais had said so before. But this time it was true. All the usual processes,such as a trip to the immigration detention centre,were skipped. At about 4pm,al-Araibi was taken straight to the airport,where he was rushed through customs and taken to a VIP lounge,where he had a shower."No lawyer,no Australian embassy. They take me straight to the airport."He wasn't sure until a couple of hours before boarding whether he was destined for Bahrain or Melbourne.
"I take phone of the police,I speak to my wife,she tell me everyone is waiting for me in Australia. I OK,comfortable now. Just two hours before."
Reflecting on the whole saga,Foster says the international soccer community"acts to the tune of money,influence and power",and that it was thanks to the combined actions of a whole lot of groups and organisations that this standard rule was subverted."It is a wonderful example of people power creating the ground for action,"he says.
He is similarly blunt in his assessment of the Australian government's efforts."Marise Payne felt strongly about the case,although Scott Morrison was slow to offer direct support. In fairness to Scott,when he decided to act,he did so effectively. The ambassador-designate in Bangkok[Allan McKinnon] was outstanding,in my view,and we worked closely throughout on a number of levels."Al-Araibi's case became increasingly"real"for people,Foster says. He wasn't just a faceless refugee,but rather,a footballer from the Melbourne suburbs. The campaign gave al-Araibi a name,and an identity.
There was one final,bizarre twist. As guards led al-Araibi to the airport gate – beyond which,on the air-bridge,his new friend Evan Jones was waiting for him,to sit with him on the flight home – he was presented with a soccer ball. One of the guards wanted his autograph.
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