Monday, December 28, 2009

Thai Military Preparing to Return Hmong to Laos [-Abhisit's Thailand is no better than Hun Xen's Cambodia?]


December 27, 2009
By SETH MYDANS
The New York Times

Thailand’s record also includes pirate attacks and brutalizing of Vietnamese boat people at sea, the forced return to their deaths of 42,000 Cambodians fleeing the Khmer Rouge in 1979 and the expulsion just a year ago of 1,000 Rohingya refugees from Myanmar who were towed back to sea and left adrift in boats without motors
BANGKOK — The Thai military has mobilized troops and buses and was preparing Sunday to forcibly return 4,000 Hmong asylum seekers to Laos in a lingering echo of the Vietnam War more than three decades ago, human rights groups and other observers said.

Members of a mountain tribal group that aided the United States in its “secret war” in Laos, the asylum seekers say they fear retribution by the Laotian government, which continues to battle a ragged insurgency of several hundred Hmong fighters.

Thailand appears to be moving ahead with the repatriation despite vigorous complaints from the United States as well as from the United Nations and human rights and aid groups. It is doing so although it has screened the asylum seekers and determined that some were eligible for refugee status, human rights groups said.

“This forced repatriation would place the refugees in serious danger of persecution at the hands of the Lao authorities, who to this day have not forgiven the Hmong for being dedicated allies of the United States during the Vietnam War,” Joel Charney, acting president of Refugees International, an advocacy group based in Washington, said in a statement.

The remote encampment in Thailand is one of the last remnants of an Indochinese refugee population that once numbered 1.5 million and included boat people from Vietnam and survivors of the Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia.

Since the war ended in 1975, the United States has processed and accepted about 150,000 Hmong refugees in Thailand. But over the past three years the Thai government has not allowed foreign governments or international agencies to interview the Hmong in a camp in Petchabun Province, 290 kilometers, or 180 miles, north of Bangkok.

Refugee experts say they are a mix of economic migrants and genuine refugees who have left Laos over the past few years. They have included dozens who display what appear to be the scars of battle wounds, as well as some older refugees who fought on the American side during the war.

A separate group of 158 asylum seekers has been interviewed by the U.N., which has labeled them “people of concern” who could face persecution on their return. But the Thai government says these asylum seekers also will eventually be forcibly repatriated.

Reporters have not been permitted into the camps since 2007, and last May the main aid group assisting the Hmong in Petchabun, Médecins Sans Frontières, withdrew from the camp in protest of the conditions there.

“We can no longer work in a camp where the military uses arbitrary imprisonment of influential leaders to pressure refugees into a ‘voluntary’ return to Laos, and forces our patients to pass through military checkpoints to access our clinic,” the group said in a statement.

On Sunday, Sunai Phasuk, the Thailand representative of Human Rights Watch, said a joint task force under military command had been assembled at the camp and had been instructed to wear body armor in case of the kind of violent resistance that has accompanied forced returns in the past.

He said Maj. Gen. Thanongsak Apirakyothin, the third army regional commander, arrived at the camp Sunday and said that the army was prepared to move and that everyone would be sent back to Laos.

“The first wave of action to clear the camp will happen on Dec. 27 night, and the deportation can start on Dec. 28 morning,” Mr. Sunai said in an e-mail message. “During that, mobile phone signals will be jammed to prevent the Hmong from contacting outsiders. More than 100 buses and trucks are to be put on standby.”

A government spokesman, Panitan Wattanayagorn, said that the exact timing of the deportations was in the hands of the military but that it would be completed by the end of December in accordance with an agreement with Laos.

He said the Laotian government had given assurances that the returnees would be well treated and that the U.N. could interview them for resettlement within 30 days of their arrival.

“We are sending back these people based on our good faith that there is no reason to believe that they will be harmed,” he said.

Speaking by telephone from Washington on Sunday, Eric Schwartz, assistant secretary of state for population, refugees and migration, said he had met with high-level officials in Thailand last week and that the United States was prepared to assist both with questions of third-country asylum for those who merited protection and with the return to Laos of economic migrants.

“We recognize the challenge of irregular migration that the government of Thailand faces, but there is absolutely no need to resort to these kinds of measures,” he said.

Lionel Rosenblatt, president emeritus of Refugees International and a key figure in the planning for the post-war evacuations from Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, said Thailand had been an active transit point for as many as 1.5 million refugees from the wars in Indochina. “To end by pushing 4,000 refugees by truck into Laos where they can’t be monitored would be a terrible way to end this endeavor,” he said. However, Thailand’s record also includes pirate attacks and brutalizing of Vietnamese boat people at sea, the forced return to their deaths of 42,000 Cambodians fleeing the Khmer Rouge in 1979 and the expulsion just a year ago of 1,000 Rohingya refugees from Myanmar who were towed back to sea and left adrift in boats without motors.

21 comments:

Anonymous said...

42,000 Cambodian refugee were dead in mine field and by Thai machine gun at Phnom Dang Rek. How can we Cambodian forget about this cruelty and inhumane act of Thai soldiers.
With these kind of cruelty, how can Thai rank 4 friendliest nation in the world!! Some thing is wrong, terribly wrong here.

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Anonymous said...

Who created the problem?where is their land.Vietcong has swallowed cambodia and Laos quietly,no longer Thailand.Because of that,I told you khmer,you must love each other ,khmer surin ,khmer boreyRam,khmer kandal,khmer krom and follow our Lord Buddha.But not Tep Vong Sihanouk Ok?In 1979,I was sent back to Cambodia along Peah Vihear,we slep 2 nights at frontier,then we walked 5 days ,from Preah Vihear until Campong Thom,we ate manioc,pousse bambou...etc
Please human rights ask UN to find place for them.

Anonymous said...

international out of cash to bhelp UNHCR

Anonymous said...

Where is khmer seaside?Where is Laos seaside?Vietcong seaside=2300 km.

Anonymous said...

If KI post an article that Vietnamese killed 42 Khmer, people in here will express out rage by the hundred, but if Thai killed 42,000 Khmer, most people just keep quite!

Just my observation.

Anonymous said...

I completely understand the hatred that many cambodian refugees feel toward the Thai soldiers. After 1979, when my family was fleeing srok Khmer to go to the refugee camps, they witness the abuse, rape, torture and killings committed by the Thais! These soldiers had no respect for Cambodian life! Thailand is known for the land of smiles, but behind that smile, they are holding a knife, ready to stab Cambodians in the back!

Anonymous said...

if you think that ,we thai so cruel then why you khmer keep running to us for help?we thai people hate youn as much as you hate them,in the next cetury we thai people do not want to live next door to youn..........

Anonymous said...

Thai bitches are just as bad and stinky as Viet Bitches. They are selling their asses for a living. Just ask the Americans and/or the French or the world for that matter! They will tell you all about it...Enough said?

Anonymous said...

I personally was a former asylum. I please the USA, UN and the other countries love freedom in the Globe give them a new home.

Anonymous said...

Thai,Khmer rouge,Vietnamese who killed people khmer.When I was in the Camp of Khao I dang,on the morning thai fired some 79 in the camp of the refugee.I saw some people khmer death.In the Camp in Kamput,one sodier thai named Ah Ngock who killed some refugee khmer at night,American knew about that because he died in hospital in Kamput.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gWK5eZzL8aQ&feature=related

Anonymous said...

To please China Cambodia returned 20 Uighurs back to china.
result = $1.2billions aid to Cambodia.

To please Myanmar Thailand Expulsed
1000 Rohingyas out of Thailand
result = Myanmar not support Preah Vihear for Cambodia.

To please Viet Nam Thailand will return back 4000 Hmongs the last force against communistes Viets after the collapse of Khmers Rouge.
result = ...head of Hun Sen ?

Let's see the next game.

Anonymous said...

4000 thousands people (former american partners)to be returned to the communist country by Thailand, the US will send only vigorous complaints but no condemnations like in the case of Cambodia sending back the 20 Uighurs.What's making the difference ?

Anonymous said...

On top of what is said in the article the thai army still shoot and kill Khmer civilians who cross the border just find food.

The reason that Khmer run to Thailand because we have no choice and thai is a neigbour and we think they are kind as mostly except some politicians I thinks. If we a choice we don't want to be hurt by thais. That's why many Khmer have gone to live in USA or Australia etc after fleeing the country to thailand.

The situation has been like if u go on the water you find crocodiles and if you run to the river bank you find tigers threatening you.

Imagine a possibility that one day Thai people had problems in their country then they might seek somewhere to turn too. Neigbours should support each other. Why USA and Australia are so kind to the Khmer refugees.

I have no hatred towards thai or yuon citizens but I criticise their political policies if it's unfair to human.

Hatred is ignoramous and uneducated even uncivilized. It leads people to having no peace

Anonymous said...

3:54 AM
You should understand by now, that Khmers and Thais share the same culture, and their languages are almost the same. Royal Khmer words are used in Thai Royal family. No matter what Khmers still prefer Thais than Vietnamese, and Khmers still consider Thais as their hate brothers and sisters. To Khmers, Laos, Thais, and Burmese, the Vietnamese are outcasts.

Anonymous said...

Thai PM is always far better than hun sen. Returning Hmong back to their native homeland is the best for cultivation theory.....!

Anonymous said...

HOWS THIS FOR THE RECORD



























FUCK THAILAND...THE LAND OF FAKEE FUCKS............FUCKING KHMER WANNABE

Anonymous said...

OK 8;2am bend over let my dogs fu*ck your a**.

Anonymous said...

We (Khmers) are so weak and passive that's why we end up like that and we dont want to stand up with our own feet to defend our rights and our people. So we being treated like animal by the Thai and the Viet. we always fight each other instead of the enemies. and now here we are weak n defendsless.

Anonymous said...

why are we surprised? it's pad thugs in power, you know!

Anonymous said...

one suggestion for cambodia, perhaps change or even adopt new thinking or new paradigm will serve us well, really! because a lot of time, it seems like many of us still thinking in the old school mind-frame which is so outdated, i think. why not adopt, adapt, learn and have a reform and change some of our outdated thoughts will help a lot, really! that said, there is nothing wrong to be khmer and think like khmer, however, i just encourage all khmer to wake up and see the world in reality. yes, keep learning from the world as knowledge is constant and never stops, really! wake up, please! isolation and ignorance is the real enemies of cambodia and khmer people, really. please think about it, ok!