UN Appeals For Halt To Thai Plans To Deport Thousands Of Hmong To Laos
New York, Dec 24 2009 10:10AM The United Nations refugee chief today called on the Thai Government not to deport around
4,000 ethnic Hmong to neighbouring Laos.
António Guterres, UN High Commissioner for Refugees, said a halt to the planned expulsions is needed to explore
solutions of voluntary returns to Laos or resettlement in a third country.
The Thai Government has said it plans to deport the Hmong -- including at least 150 recognized refugees -- before the
end of the month, in line with a bilateral agreement with Laos.
But Mr. Guterres stressed the need to uphold the international law principle of non-refoulement, which means refugees
and asylum-seekers cannot be forcibly returned to countries or areas where they could face persecution.
"In accordance with international law, Thailand has the responsibility and international obligation to ensure that any
return of recognized refugees or other persons in ne eds of international protection to their country of origin is
undertaken on a strictly voluntary basis," he said.
"To proceed otherwise would not only endanger the protection of the refugees but set a very grave international
example."
Many Hmong living in the highlands of Laos took part in the conflict that engulfed their homeland in the 1960s and
1970s. When the Pathet Lao came to power in 1975, tens of thousands of Hmong fled to Thailand in search of asylum, while
others were resettled in Western countries such as the United States.
Mr. Guterres noted that the estimated 4,000 Hmong who would be deported include 158 recognized refugees currently held
in detention in Nong Kai in north-eastern Thailand, and a larger group being held at a camp in Petchabun without access
to UNHCR staff.
ENDS