Australian victim of invasive search at Qatar airport speaks for first time
 
 
An Australian victim of a humiliating search
conducted at a Qatar airport last month is speaking for the first time to 60
Minutes about the horror she experienced.
The young woman, who does not wish to be identified,
was one of 13 Australian women ordered off a flight from Doha to Sydney on
October 2, and subjected to an invasive medical exam at Hamad International
airport.
The woman said she was ushered into an ambulance
waiting on the tarmac and told to take her pants off.
"I'm just like, 'Why? Why?' I was in shock at
that stage."
The Qatari Government said the search was triggered
by the discovery of a premature baby 'discarded' in a bathroom bin in the
terminal but has since acknowledged that medical examinations and strip
searches were not standard procedure and those involved could face criminal
charges, although none have been laid yet.
The woman was returning to Australia from London,
where she and her husband had lived for three years, when she boarded flight
QR908.
Like many Australian expats living overseas, the
couple had struggled to secure flights to return home and were elated when they
first made it to Doha airport with just one leg of the journey remaining before
they were on Australian soil.
In all, 18 women including 13 Australians, were
marched off the plane by armed police, who spoke no English, and taken to an
area of the tarmac where two ambulances were parked.
The women said they were not told where they were
being taken or why.
"I was worried if I said no, what's going to
happen to me in this country?" she says.
"I remember laying there thinking, 'This isn't
right. This is not how this is supposed to happen.'"
Qatari authorities have confirmed the baby found in
the airport bin is now safe and has received urgent medical care, but the
mother is still yet to be found.
Qatar's Prime Minister has since issued an apology,
describing the incident as "unacceptable" and promising to "hold
those responsible… to account".
But the woman says she and the other women now
living with the memory of what happened to them in Qatar are forever scarred by
the traumatic experience.
"[Our] basic human rights were completely taken
away….we just wanted to get home."
 
          
     
                                
 
 


