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Laos: Efforts in foreign affairs boost Lao image
Laos
HANOI, Dec. 29 (Xinhua) -- Laos' efforts in foreign affairs boosted the country's image in the international arena in 2008, the Lao newspaper Vientiane Times reported Monday.

    The remark was made by Lao Foreign Affairs Minister Thongloun Sisoulith at the review on the country's diplomacy achievements this year.

    The 2008 diplomacy has seen Lao enhancement its relationship with Latin America, Europe and Middle Eastern countries, including Brazil, Argentina, Peru, Venezuela, Egypt, Turkey, Switzerland and Kuwait.

    Another significant achievement was Laos' success in hosting Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) meetings and summits. Laos hosted the third Greater Mekong Sub-Region Summit in March and the recent Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam Summit, said Thongloun.

    Thongloun said initiatives proposed by Laos to regional and international bodies were highly valued by international community and Laos was considered to be a suitable venue for important meetings in the future.

    While highlighting the achievements, Thongloun also talked about challenges in the foreign affairs arena. These include ineffective coordination between the ministry and other sectors, and slow progress implementing agreements between Laos and foreign countries.

    Thongloun said Lao embassies in foreign countries should do more to promote tourism and encourage foreign companies to invest in Laos. He also said there was a shortage of qualified diplomats and many foreign affairs officials had limited skills.

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-12/29/content_10576178.htm
Posted by vlianemany on Tuesday, December 30 @ 18:09:28 EST (2 reads)
(comments? | Laos | Score: 0)
Thailand: More Hmong Refugees Repatriated from Thailand
Thailand103 Hmong refugees were sent back to Laos in late November 2008 
Thai authorities recently sent back to Laos a group of 103 Lao Hmongs from 29 households, whohad been languishing for four years in Ban Huay Namkhao detention camp in Khao Khoh district, Thailand’s Phetchaboun province, hoping they would be accepted for resettlement in the United States. This is the 9th group of Hmongs refugees repatriated to Laos since the beginning of 2008, increasing the total number of Hmongs returned to Laos so far to over 1,800 people with more than 6,000 remaining at the camp. The repatriation was implemented in accordance with an agreement between the Lao and Thai governments aiming at completing the repatriation of all Hmong refugees from Thailand by mid-2009 at the latest. Both governments have consistently maintained that they do not consider the Hmongs in Huay Namhkao as refugees but illegal immigrants who must be returned to Laos without third party intervention, an argument that is totally different from the international community’s perception. And they assert that the refugees were not forced to return.
Posted by vlianemany on Tuesday, December 30 @ 17:27:04 EST (2 reads)
(Read More... | 3355 bytes more | comments? | Thailand | Score: 0)
Laos: Issue of Illegal Labor in Thailand Is Increasingly Serious
Laos
Foreign laborers in Thailand
Authorities in Vientiane acknowledge that Lao illegal labor in Thailand is becoming an issue of increasing concern. The number of these workers in Thailand, according to Thai authorities, is approximately 300,000, as opposed to Lao authorities’ estimate of only 200,000. Nonetheless, this situation has resulted in an increase in the number of Lao youths, especially young women, being forced into prostitution and at risk of falling into the trap of transnational human trafficking.

As admitted by Major Khamkeo Manola, Deputy Director of  the Transnational Human Trafficking Department of the Ministry of Interior, the number of victimized Lao youths from 2001 to 2008, totaled more than 2,000; the majority of them were women. And just last year alone, Thai authorities sent over 28,000 illegal workers back to Laos via the Vangtau-Chongmek border checkpoint in Champassack province.
The fact that the Lao government is unable to create enough jobs for its workforce will certainly contribute to the increase of the number of Lao youths, between the age of 14 and 49 years old, sneaking into Thailand to seek jobs and work illegally there. Lao officials have planned to create and find at least 100,000 jobs for its workforce during the fiscal year 2008-09; of which 25,000 were to be found in neighboring countries, especially Thailand, while the rest would be created domestically. However, during 2007-2008, the government was able to create barely 40,000 jobs domestically and 8,000 abroad. Of the 8,000 workers who were sent to work abroad. 1,000 of them have been returned by Thai employers who said the workers lacked the skills they required.

The concern for finding employment for Lao workers in Thailand is further augmented by the fact that the Thai government has decided to limit the number of legal foreign workers from Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia, to no more than 800 thousands beginning next year, to reserve jobs for Thai workers due to the impact of the global economic crisis. Thus job opportunities for Lao workers in Thailand will inevitably become more scarce. 

http://www.voanews.com/lao/2008-12-29-voa4.cfm
Posted by vlianemany on Tuesday, December 30 @ 17:23:59 EST (2 reads)
(comments? | Laos | Score: 0)
Hmong chief Vang Pao blamed for Refugee Problem
Vientianne say the refugee problem in Thailand is work of the pro-US leader

Laos yesterday blamed overseas Hmong leader Vang Pao for the influx of ethnic Hmong refugees into Thailand.

"We have had the Hmong problem for a long time at Ban Winai camp, Wat Tham Krabok and now Phetchabun, and it is because of Vang Pao," Lao Ambassador to Thailand Hiem Phommachanh said.

Vang Pao is the Hmong leader who led the community in helping the US Central Intelligence Agency fight Communists in the 1960s and 1970s. He has been living in the US since the end of the Vietnam war.

Thailand has sheltered Hmong ethnic refugees since the fall of Vientiane to the Communist Pathet Lao movement in 1975.

They used to live in the Ban Winai refugee camp in Northeastern Nakhon Phanom province and at Wat Tham Krabok in Saraburi, but these facilities were shut down after the refugees were resettled in the US.  About 6,500 Hmong are now living in Phetchabun's Ban Huay Nam Khao.

They say they are associated with the CIA's fighters and that they recently fled suppression in Laos recently.

Hiem said, "They came to Phetchabun only in the hope of resettlement to the US."

He made the comments as part of a special lecture to the National Economic and Social Advisory Council on relations between Thailand and Laos yesterday.


It is rare for a Lao official to speak about the ethnic Hmong refugees in Phetchabun.

The Hmong in Laos, most of whom live in remote areas, did not know about resettlement opportunities in the US until agitators told them about the possibility, the ambassador said.

Officially, Vientiane says the Hmong in Phetchabun are Thailand's domestic problem and has refused to take them back saying Bangkok has failed to prove they are really Lao citizens.

To solve the Hmong problem at its root, the ambassador said, the human traffickers who urge and facilitate their entry into Thailand need to be dealt with.

"We have to find out who is behind the migration of the Hmong: Thais, Americans or people in Laos," Hiem said, stressing that all three countries are obligated to deal firmly with any of their citizens involved in human trafficking.

Supalak Ganjanakhundee
Posted by vlianemany on Tuesday, December 30 @ 17:13:28 EST (2 reads)
(comments? | Score: 0)
Thailand: Thai PM says he accepts court ban on him, his party
ThailandThailand's Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat said Tuesday he accepted the ruling by the constitutional court banning him from politics for five years and dissolving his party for electoral fraud.

Somchai reacted calmly to the verdict by saying: 'I did my best to administer the country.'

Thailand's Constitution Court Tuesday ruled the three constituents of the ruling coalition -- People Power Party (PPP), Chart Thai Party and Matchima Thipataya Party guilty of electoral fraud and ordered them to be dissolved.

The ruling also banned the executives of the three parties from engaging into politics for five years.

The verdict effectively removes Somchai from his post as the government leader.

The verdict was handed down while Somchai was chairing the weekly Cabinet meeting in Chiang Mai, which he made a temporary government seat since his return from a summit of the Asia-Pacific counties in Peru last Wednesday.

The opposition People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) occupied the Government House, and then besieged the Suvarnabhumi and Don Mueang airports in a showdown to topple his government, which the protesters said was a proxy of ousted premier Thaksin Shinawatra.

DPA added: The verdict was rejected by hundreds of pro-government demonstrators wearing red shirts who had gathered outside the court house to protest the controversial case, which was widely predicted to go against the PPP.

'Today the court has dissolved the PPP, but PPP followers nationwide will not accept the ruling,' said a leader of the Democratic Alliance Against Dictatorship (DAAD), as the pro-government supporters have dubbed themselves.

'We don't accept the verdict,' said Paporn Boonkhan, a 46-year-old pro-government protestor from Chiang Rai province. 'We will only accept democracy.'

The nine Constitution Court judges on the case had to shift the venue to the Administrative Court building in northern Bangkok to avoid a gathering of the pro-government DAAD, but the protesters quickly moved to the new court.

The Administrative Court was initially under the protection of Thai soldiers armed with M-16 rifles who were later replaced by riot police, eyewitnesses said.

The DAAD is a pro-government movement that is a reverse image of the People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD), the anti-government protesters who have occupied Bangkok's two airports, closing off the capital to air traffic in their bid to topple the administration.

The Constitution Court speeded up the final hearing of three election fraud cases involving the People Power, Chart Thai and Matchimathipataya parties, which comprise the current coalition government. The court's critics see the hasty sentences as an effort to end Thailand's political crisis through the judiciary.

The three parties were charged with colluding in violating election laws in the Dec 23, 2007 polls, by allowing top party executives to participate in vote-buying.

Under the Thai constitution, parties must be dissolved and their key executives banned from politics for five years if even one of their members is found guilty of election fraud.

In the ensuing power vacuum, several scenarios are possible, political observers said.

The remaining members of the People Power Party, which won about 230 out of 480 contested seats in the 2007 general election, are expected to shift to the Puea Thai party, which would hold enough seats to form a new coalition government with remnant members of the Chart Thai and Matchimathipataya parties.

A parliament session will need to be held to elect a new prime minister.

Another possibility is that certain clauses in the constitution may be used to allow the judiciary to appoint a non-elected prime minister and interim government to rule the country on an interim basis prior to a new election.

Such as option might require an endorsement by Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who is head of state under Thailand's constitutional monarchy.

While that option is favoured by many Thais as a means of placating the anti-government protesters who are holding Bangkok's two airports hostage, it is not expected to be accepted by government supporters.

The pro-government DAAD, or 'red shirts,' are expected to protest any guilty verdict against the People Power party and reject any effort to establish a non-elected government.

Government politicians suspect the Constitution Court of working hand-in-hand with the PAD, a loose coalition of groups united only in their desire to prevent a political comeback by fugitive former prime minister Thaksin Shinwatara, a populist politician who dominated Thai politics during his two-term 2001-06 premiership and now lives in self-exile.

The PAD is known to have the support of members of Thailand's political elite, including leaders of the army, which toppled Thaksin with a coup in September 2006.

There are worries that the DAAD will launch the kind of street protests and civil disobedience tactics practiced by the PAD over the last six months that have brought the country to its knees.

http://www.laosnews.net/story/437228
Posted by vlianemany on Tuesday, December 02 @ 20:23:55 EST (4 reads)
(comments? | Thailand | Score: 0)
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