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Clinton Calls On Laos To Find Missing Activist


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Sombath Somphone, far left, stands with other winners of the Ramon Magsaysay Awards in Manila on Aug. 31, 2005. (Photo: Reuters)

Sombath Somphone, far left, stands with other winners of the Ramon Magsaysay Awards in Manila on Aug. 31, 2005. (Photo: Reuters)

WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Wednesday added to international pressure on the authoritarian government in Laos to investigate the disappearance a month ago of a prominent social activist and reunite him with his family.

Sombath Somphone, 60, went missing Dec. 15 in the capital of Vientiane after he was stopped by police at a checkpoint. The government of the small Southeast Asian nation has disavowed responsibility for the disappearance, suggesting he was kidnapped over a personal dispute.

Laos is a one-party state and the government is intolerant of dissent, but associates say Sombath’s work was neither directly political nor confrontational. Educated in the US, he won one of Asia’s top civil awards in 2005 for his work reducing poverty and promoting education at a training center he founded.

Clinton said Sombath has worked tirelessly to promote sustainable development in Laos. She called on the Lao government to pursue a transparent investigation and to do everything in its power to bring about his “immediate and safe return home.â€

The UN human rights office and the European Union have also voiced deep concern.

In Bangkok on Wednesday, three Southeast Asian lawmakers who visited Laos to discuss the case said they were not satisfied with the explanations they had received from Lao officials.

The lawmakers from Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines rejected the idea that the disappearance was a simple kidnapping. They suggested Lao security agencies may have acted on their own in holding Sombath without informing other wings of the government.

“It is indeed possible that the officials we met, high though they are in the government and National Assembly, do not know what happened to Sombath,†Philippine lawmaker Walden Bello told a news conference. He said they urged officials to investigate whether elements within the government were behind the abduction.

Closed-circuit TV footage showed him being detained by police and then driven away in the company of two unidentified men.

While not a political figure, Sombath is a leading representative of Laos’ fledgling civil society.

He participated in an October meeting in Vientiane of non-governmental organizations from Asia and Europe. The forum highlighted the need to safeguard the environment and the fair land use for small farmers. Such views are often odds with those of the government, which emphasizes rapid economic growth and major infrastructure projects in what is one of Asia’s poorest nations.

The latest State Department human rights report, for 2011, said arbitrary arrests and detentions persisted in Laos despite laws prohibiting them. It also said “prison conditions were harsh and at times life-threatening, and corruption in the police and judiciary persisted.â€

Peck reported from Bangkok, Thailand.



Source: Irrawaddy.org
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Closed-circuit TV footage showed him being detained by police and then driven away in the company of two unidentified men.

and they claim

he was kidnapped over a personal dispute.

So, the police were party to a private kidnapping at a police checkpoint. Well then, no blame, eh?

They couldn't come up with a better lie?

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Sad, isn't it? Yes, the Lao government's lie is pretty flimsy but is a good example of authoritarian thought control. Now that Myanmar is loosening up, Laos is probably the most repressive regime in the region. The question now might be when will the western government sanctions start and the NGOs start pulling out? That of course wouldn't bother the Chinese who would love to prop up an increasingly authoritarian neighbour with plenty of natural resources.

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  • 4 months later...

There are probably more Chinese in Laos now than local Lao. I just read a news/travel article that there aren't enough Lao residents in Luang Prabang to give sufficient alms to the monks every morning.

That doesn't surprise me. Although the Lao government is seen as repressive, it is remarkably open-minded when it comes to selling it's country to foreigners. As a foreigner you can open your own business, hire your own countrymen to work for you and not give a crap about providing opportunities to Lao nationals.

BTW many of the hotels in Luang Prabang are owned and run by foreigners, many of whom are Chinese.

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There are probably more Chinese in Laos now than local Lao. I just read a news/travel article that there aren't enough Lao residents in Luang Prabang to give sufficient alms to the monks every morning.

That doesn't surprise me. Although the Lao government is seen as repressive, it is remarkably open-minded when it comes to selling it's country to foreigners. As a foreigner you can open your own business, hire your own countrymen to work for you and not give a crap about providing opportunities to Lao nationals.

BTW many of the hotels in Luang Prabang are owned and run by foreigners, many of whom are Chinese.

Where do you get your information? Yes, as a foreigner you can open your own business. Is this wrong in your opinion?

If you do open a business, 80% of your staff have to be Laotian.

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