Refugees in Thailand Sparks Suicide Attempts
Starvation, Repatriation of Laos, Hmong Refugees in Thailand Sparks Suicide Attempts
Washington, D.C. and Bangkok, Thailand, April 30, 2009, For Immediate Release
Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva's recent announcement to force nearly 5,500 Lao Hmong political refugees back to the military regime that they fled in Laos has sparked a wave of suicide attempts by the refugees who now reportedly face another major food cut off in Thailand.
"A series of
recent food cut-offs, fresh water supply denials and
heavy-handed attempts to pressure some 5,500 Lao Hmong
political refugees to go back to Laos by Thai Prime Minister
Abasit and Thai hird Army commanders is causing a wave of
suicide attempts and terrible human suffering of the Lao and
Hmong people," stated Philip Smith, Executive Director of
the Center for Public Policy Analysis (CPPA) in Washington,
D.C. "Ironically, many of these 5,500 Lao Hmong refugees
fled political and religious persecution as well as mass
starvation and military attacks in Laos to seek political
asylum in Thailand , according to Amnesty International and
others; Now Thailand's new Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva
is apparently ordering elements of the Royal Thai Army to
cut-off food deliveries to the Lao Hmong refugees so they
will be forced to return to the brutal regime in Laos that
they fled and where Lao Hmong refugees have disappeared or
been killed."http://www.amnestyusa.org/document.php?lang=e&id=ENGASA390022009 Smith continued: "On April 25, four Lao Hmong political
refugees in Huay Nam Khao refugee detention camp, in
Petchabun Province, Thailand, Mr. Soua Lor, 35, Hli Yang
25, Nka tsua Lee, 30, and Lee Pao Vang, 26, reportedly
attempted to commit suicide because they did not want to be
forced back to Laos where they fled persecution, and where
they have a well-founded fear of persecution. These Hmong
refugees apparently cut their wrists and arms in protest of
Thai Prime Minister Abasit's recent new efforts to deny
their families food and force them back to Laos. The
refugees suffered heavy bleeding." Thousands of Lao and
Hmong civilians and political dissidents have been starved
to death or killed in military attacks by the Lao government
in recent years according to independent human rights
organizations, journalists and others. The Stalinist regime
in Laos remains a close ally of the military regimes in
Burma and North
Korea.http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/ASA26/003/2007
"If the 5,500 Hmong political refugees at Ban Huay Nam
Khao, Thailand, cannot be resettled in third countries such
as Australia or the United States, or granted political
asylum in Thailand, these four Hmong political refugees want
to die in Thailand with dignity instead going back to Laos
and being tortured and die slowly by the Laos Communist
Government regime, they said," stated Vaughn Vang, Director
of the Hmong Lao Human Rights Council, Inc. Vaughn Vang,
of the Hmong Lao Human Rights Council continued: "There are
about 5,500 Hmong asylum seekers who do not, under any
circumstance, agree to return back to Laos. They have
clearly stated that they are former veterans and descendent
of veterans, who served with U.S. military and clandestine
forces during the Vietnam War, including the Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA); Many of the Hmong refugees have
been hunted, persecuted, tortured by the Lao LPDR regime.
They will definitely face persecution and death if they are
return to Laos." On February 19, 2009, top officers of
the Lao Armed Forces and Lao Communist Party officials,
including Deputy Chief of Staff Brigadier General Bouasieng
Champapham as well as Mr. Yong Chanthalasy, and nine other
Lao Officials, along with Thai military counterparts,
reportedly made an official visit to the refugee detention
Camp at Ban Huay Nam Khao, Thailand. Vaughn Vang
concluded: "The Lao officials, along with their Thai
counterparts from the Thai Third Army, spoke out to insult,
intimidate, and threaten the Hmong refugees with
repatriation back to Laos by saying that ‘the Hmong have
no other choice but repatriation.' After the Lao officials
visited the Camp, Hmong refugees refused to volunteer to go
back to Laos; the Thai and Lao militaries then joined hands
to post signs with both the Laos Communist and Royal
Thailand flags at the Camp stating that ‘the Hmong have to
be repatriated to Laos by mid 2009 and the Camp will be
closed by August 2009,' and they have listed a group of the
Hmong Leaders to be arrested and forced to repatriate back
to Laos to face persecution." April 23^rd , 2009, was
reportedly the day to deliver food supplies to the 5,500
refugees in the Camp again, but elements of the Thai
military, including the Royal Thai Third Army, prevented the
delivery. Many of the Lao Hmong refugees, facing despair and
starvation, may soon be out of food as a result of Thai
Prime Minister Abhisit's new food cut-off and starvation
policy toward Lao Hmong refugees according to refugee and
reliable sources in Thailand. More Lao Hmong refugee
suicide attempts are expected in Thailand in the coming days
and
weeks. ENDS