Thailand sends 4,000 ethnic Hmong back to Laos despite safety concerns
By Jerry Harmer, APMonday, December 28, 2009
Thai troops deport 4,000 Hmong to Laos
PHETCHABUN, Thailand — Thai troops packed more than 4,000 ethnic Hmong into military trucks for a one-way journey to Laos, all but ending the Hmong’s three-decade search for asylum following their alliance with the U.S. during the Vietnam War.
The United States and rights groups have said the Hmong could be in danger if returned to the country that they fought, unsuccessfully, to keep from falling into communist hands in the 1970s.
The European Union said it was “deeply dismayed” by the forcible deportation and issued a statement that urged Laos to ensure the Hmongs’ human rights are protected and international observers are granted “unfettered access” to them.
Though Thai soldiers were armed with batons and shields Monday, Col. Thana Charuwat said no weapons were used in the repatriation and the Hmong offered no resistance. The last of the group crossed the border early Tuesday.
Many Hmong, an ethnic minority from Laos’ rugged mountains, fought under CIA advisers during Vietnam to back a pro-American Lao government — Washington’s so-called “secret war” — before the communist victory in 1975.
Some former American soldiers and civilians who developed close bonds with the Hmong during the war believe that the United States should have done more to help its one-time allies.
Since the war, more than 300,000 Lao, mostly Hmong, are known to have fled to Thailand and for years were housed in sprawling camps aided by international agencies. Most were either repatriated to Laos or resettled in third countries, particularly the United States. Smaller numbers found refuge in France, Australia and Canada.
But now Thailand says it plans to close the camp it emptied Monday.
Among those deported were 158 Hmong who had been identified by the United Nations as refugees and were being held separately from the larger group at a detention center near the Lao border.
“This is a departure from Thailand’s long-standing humanitarian practice and it sets a very grave example,” said Ariane Rummery, a UNHCR spokeswoman in Bangkok. According to recent reports, some may be able to resettle in the United States and other countries, but that process is now complicated by their return to Laos, where the UNHCR has no presence.
The Thai government claims most of the Hmong are economic migrants who entered the country illegally and have no claims to refugee status.
New York-based Human Rights Watch on Monday called the deportation “appalling” and a low point for Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva’s government.
“As a result of what Thailand has done to the Lao Hmong today, Prime Minister Abhisit sinks Thailand’s record on contempt for human rights and international law to a new low,” said Sunai Phasuk, a Thai representative for Human Rights Watch.
U.S. State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said in a statement that the United Nations and Thailand in the past had deemed that many of the Hmong in this group were “in need of protection because of the threats they might face in Laos.”
“The United States strongly urges Thai authorities to suspend this operation,” Kelly said.
Abhisit, however, said that Thailand had received “confirmation from the Lao government that these Hmong will have a better life.”
The Hmong were driven out of the camp in military trucks and were then to be put on 110 buses going to the Thai border town of Nong Khai. Once in Laos, they’ll head to the Paksane district in the central province of Bolikhamsai, Thana said.
Thana said 5,000 soldiers, officials and civilian volunteers were involved in the eviction. He said the troops carried no firearms and that their shields and batons met international standards for dealing with situations in which people are being moved against their will.
“There was no resistance from the repatriated Hmong because we used psychological tactics to talk with them, to assure them that they will have a better life in Laos, as the Lao government has confirmed,” he told reporters.
But one rights group said callers from inside the camp had reported violence and bloodshed.
Thana, the Thai army’s coordinator for the operation, denied the allegation.
“There has been no violence, and nobody has been injured,” Thana said, noting it was impossible for anyone in the camp to call outside because the military had jammed mobile phone signals.
Journalists and independent observers were barred from the camp and were allowed no closer than a press center about 7 miles (12 kilometers) away.
Laos Foreign Ministry spokesman Khenthong Nuanthasing rejected international concerns, saying the government has a “humanitarian policy” for resettling the Hmong.
He told The Associated Press in a telephone interview that the group would initially be placed in a temporary shelter and then housed in two “development villages” — in Bolikhamsai province and in Vientiane province — where each family will receive a house and a plot of land that international observers will be welcome to inspect.
Associated Press writers Jocelyn Gecker in Bangkok and Grant Peck in Chiang Mai, Thailand, contributed to this report.
Tags: Asia, Bangkok, Laos, North America, Phetchabun, Southeast Asia, Thailand, United States