Marise Payne says 'extensive efforts' under way for return of Hakeem Al-Araibi

Australia has ensured the Thai government is well aware the release of a detained refugee is of great importance to the nation, the foreign minister says.

Hakeem AlAraibi has been held in Thailand since November when he was arrested.

Hakeem AlAraibi has been held in Thailand since November when he was arrested. Source: AAP

Foreign Minister Marise Payne has stressed that Australia is making "extensive efforts" to seek the return of a Melbourne-based soccer player as his detention in Thailand continues.

Hakeem Al-Araibi has been held in Thailand since November when he was arrested over an Interpol Red Notice warrant issued by his native Bahrain while on holiday.

Australia granted Al-Araibi asylum in 2017, but Bahrain wants him returned to serve a prison sentence for a charge he denies.

Senator Payne, who raised Al-Araibi's case again in a meeting with senior Thai government figures earlier this month, says Australia is "deeply concerned" by his ongoing detention.


"We have most definitely ensured that the Thai government is well aware, at all levels, of the great importance of this matter to Australia," Senator Payne told ABC Radio's AM on Wednesday.

"We are making extensive efforts to seek his return."

The minister said the Interpol Red Notice warrant issued by Bahrain didn't comply with Interpol's constitution and was cancelled by Australia as soon as it confirmed Al-Araibi was a refugee.

"As a refugee, I am absolutely focused on trying to achieve his release from detention in Thailand and his safe return to Australia and to his wife," she said.

It comes as Al-Araibi told SBS's chief football analyst Craig Foster, who visited the footballer in prison on Tuesday, that he wsa "losing hope".

Al-Araibi plays for a semi-professional Australian soccer team, Melbourne's Pascoe Vale Football Club, and has played for the Bahraini national team.




Former Socceroo Craig Foster visited Al-Araibi at a Bangkok prison on Tuesday and says is "losing hope".

Foster has criticised FIFA, soccer's world governing body, and the Asian Football Confederation for not doing more for the jailed player.

"We feel as though football hasn't done enough," Foster said after meeting with Al-Araibi.

"FIFA has failed to uphold their own human rights policy and certainly the AFC and President Sheik Salman have been completely silent throughout this whole process. It's simply not good enough."


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Presented by Justin Sungil Park

Source: AAP



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