Bangkok urges Israel to relocate Thai workers away from Gaza Strip
After an agricultural worker from Thailand dies in a missile strike in Israel close to the Gaza Strip, the government in Bangkok asks for 4,000 workers to be moved to safer ground
The government in Thailand on Thursday urged Israel to relocate 4,000 Thai nationals working near the battle-scarred Gaza Strip after one of its citizens was killed.
Israeli police said a Thai farm labourer, Narakorn Kittiyongkul, died on Wednesday when a projectile fired from Gaza struck the greenhouse where he was working in the southern part of the country.
He joined a soaring death toll from 17 days of conflict, which has claimed more than 700 lives so far and prompted frantic diplomatic efforts to forge a truce led by the US and the United Nations.
The Thai Foreign Ministry said its embassy in Tel Aviv had advised its citizens to stop working in the area near Gaza.
“The Thai Embassy has contacted the Israeli Foreign Ministry and employers to ask them to relocate 4,000 Thai workers in agriculture estates near the Gaza Strip immediately and unconditionally to safe areas 10 to 20 kilometres away,” ministry spokesman Sek Wannamethee told reporters in Bangkok.