Thursday, September 3, 2009

Interior Ministry finally lets Mong fly to Japan




Writer: BangkokPost.com
Published: 3/09/2009 at 04:47 PM

The Interior Ministry made an about turn on Thursday and sent a letter to the Foreign Ministry saying it had no objection to Mong Thongdee, a stateless boy from Chiang Rai, being allowed to leave for Japan to take part in the Origami Airplane contest in Chiba on Sept 19 and 20.

On Wednesday, the 12-year-old boy flew to Bangkok from Chiang Rai and filed a request with the Interior Ministry for permission to attend the paper airplane contest, but the ministry refused him an official certificate to travel overseas.

However, the Foreign Ministry agreed to give him a temporary passport to allow him to represent Thailand in the contest.

Interior Minister Chavarat Charnvirakul said on Wednesday that if the boy wanted to compete in Japan, he had to represent Burma as a Burmese national.

Mong was born in Thailand to Burmese migrant workers and has been refused Thai citizenship.

A meeting was held at the Interior Ministry on Thursday to reconsider this matter. It was attended by officials from the Office of the Permanent Secretary, Foreign Affairs Division, Civil Registration Division and National Security Council.

After the meeting, Local Administration Department chief Wongsak Sawasdipanich said the Interior Ministry had decided to let Mong travel to Japan. The decision was based on consideration of related laws, cooperation treaties and human rights.

He said the Interior Ministry does not have the authority to give permission for the boy to travel out of the country. The agencies that have such authority are the Foreign Ministry and Immigration Bureau, he said.

Mr Wongsak said the change of mind was not a result of pressure from society. The decision would not change the fact that Mong is a son of Burmese parents who registered as aliens in 2003, and were awaiting repatriation on Feb 28 next year.

Earlier in the day, Lawyers Council representative Nitithorn Lamlua took Mong to the Central Administrative Court in Bangkok to file a complaint accusing Mr Chavarat of dereliction of duty and being too slow in making a decision on the issue.

Mr Nitithorn asked the court to treat the matter as urgent and issue an injunction to allow Mong to leave the country to participate in the origami contest and then return to Thailand while the court considered the request.

Although Mong is not a Thai citizen, he can file a complaint with the court because he is covered by Thai law and the Thai constitution, he said.

The court in the afternoon accepted the case for hearing.

Source: Bangkok Post

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