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Lao
Group Wanted Help
Several
hundred Lao people detained on their way to the capital weren’t
dissidents, one man says.
BANGKOK, Nov. 13, 2009—An ethnic Lao man briefly
detained this month as he and several hundred others converged on the Lao
capital to petition the government has said the group was planning to seek help
from the authorities rather than stage a political protest, Radio Free Asia (RFA)
reports.
“What
have we done that is so wrong, that we had to be detained? All we were doing
was asking the government for help. I want to live with dignity even if it
costs my life,” the man, 47 and an illegal migrant worker in Thailand,
said in an interview.
He spoke on
condition of anonymity to protect himself, his three children, and his
wife—one of nine people who remain in Lao custody after they were
detained en route to Vientiane on Nov. 2. The man was detained briefly and then
released.
He said he was
legally “stateless,” having left Laos after the Communists took
power in 1975, then met his wife and married in a Thai refugee center. He has
no Lao identification documents and works illegally in Thailand, one of what he
described as “hundreds of thousands” of illegal Lao laborers there.
The couple
have three children: a 22-year-old daughter, a 21-year-old son, and an
eight-year-old girl, all born in Thailand. The older two attended school
through the sixth grade, he said, adding that the oldest child works in
construction alongside her parents in Thailand.
“When
you are so poor, you do what you have to do to survive—and you sell
whatever you have to sell to survive, your labor or yourself. It’s so
sad… We have become merchandise.”
The
Seattle-based Lao Students Movement for Democracy estimated that authorities
had detained more than 300 people traveling to Vientiane from North and South.
Most were
quickly released, but the nine still in custody have been moved to Samkhe Prison
in Vientiane, the group said in a statement, dated Nov. 5 and written in Lao.
The Lao
government has denied detaining anyone, saying the reports were
"fabricated" to harm the country’s image.
Lao sources
identified those still detained as Ms. Kingkeo, 39; Mr. Soubin, 35; Mr. Souane,
50; Mr. Sinprasong, 43; Khamsone, 36; Mr. Nou, 54; Ms. Somchit, 29; Mr.
Somkhit, 28; and Sourigna, 26.
Family members
confirmed that all nine were under arrest, sources who asked not to be named
said. Some are linked to the Oct. 26, 1999
student protests in the communist Southeast Asian country—four of whose
leaders remain in Samkhe prison in Vientiane after one died in custody.
The man told
RFA’s Lao service that the group, which last year decided to call itself
Lao United for Economic and Social Renewal, was seeking economic and social
support from the government as well as the re-integration of ethnic Lao
returning from abroad.
“Everyone
who was arrested was an average common person, not an activist,” he said.
“They have grievances… they just wanted to petition.”
“The
Vietnamese [living in Laos] have more rights than Lao people in
Laos—it’s not right. Why this crackdown on us—when other
vices are rampant and no one is doing anything about real crime?”
Nov. 2
convoys
On Nov. 2, a
convoy set out from the Nam Ngum dam area of Thalat in Vientiane province,
heading to Vientiane by taxi when authorities intercepted them in Phone Hong
town, some 60 kms from Vientiane and also in Vientiane province, at around 5
a.m., relatives said.
Two busloads
carrying about 75 travelers each meanwhile set out from the south, and were
detained in Pakading town some 70 kms from Vientiane in Borikhamxay province,
witnesses said.
They had
planned to meet several hundred others at the Patuxay monument in Vientiane,
sources said.
Tiny,
landlocked Laos, with a population nearing 7 million, is one of the
world’s poorest countries. Literacy and life expectancy are low, and most
of the population is engaged in subsistence agriculture.
Original
reporting by RFA’s Lao service. Lao service director: Viengsay Luangkhot.
Executive producer: Susan Lavery. Produced in English by Sarah Jackson-Han.
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