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Thailand: Small Group
of Hmong Refugees Returned to Laos, Heightening Concerns

On Friday, May 23, a fire destroyed close to 60 percent of the
houses in the Huai Nam Khao refugee camp in Petchabun province in
northern Thailand. The blaze took hold after a week-long
demonstration in the camp, which is home to nearly 8,000 Lao Hmong
refugees, to protest the arrest of a community leader and the
imminent threat of a forced return to Laos.
Many of these refugees have told Doctors Without Borders/Médecins
Sans Frontières (MSF), the sole nongovernmental organization working
in the barbed-wire, military-controlled camp, of a life in Laos
spent fleeing violent attacks and persecution, and enduring
malnutrition and disease. MSF has been assisting this refugee
population since 2005. MSF has called on the Thai and Lao
governments to immediately stop the refugees' forced repatriation
without independent monitoring and guarantees for their safety.
Gilles Isard, MSF head of mission in Thailand, describes the recent
events in the camp leading up to the demonstrations and fire.
What prompted the week of demonstrations?
On May 16, one of the Hmong leaders in the camp was arrested by the
Thai army on the charges that he had given a phone interview to
Radio Free Asia and that he was in possession of alcohol. At the
same time, rumors were allegedly circulating in the camp that the
Thai army was planning to send him back to Laos. This prompted
thousands of people to start demonstrating in support of him. The
very same day, the leader, with the help of his wife, chained
himself to the camp’s main gate in order not to be sent to Laos. He
stayed chained at the gate until Friday when the fire started. At
the same time, a hunger strike was started in the camp. People
started coming to our outpatient clinic complaining of weakness and
in hysteria.
What else were the refugees protesting?
The demonstrators have been demanding that the United Nations step
in to the situation to protect their rights as refugees. The UN High
Commissioner for Refugees, or any other third party, has not been
allowed to enter the camp to carry out an independent screening of
their claims for refugee protection. They demanded that the UN
representatives come to the camp before May 25 and if not, they said
that they would take action to provoke the army and create chaos in
the camp. Two people threatened to kill themselves and their family
before the end of the month if UN did not step in.
Did the tensions continue to build in the camp?
On Friday, before the fire started, the situation was highly
explosive and we really thought that things were going to get out of
control. Thousands of refugees destroyed the fence and moved out of
the camp protesting in front of the military, some of the refugees
were hiding knives in order to get ready for a confrontation with
the Thai military. The Thai military remained calm and did not
respond to the provocation. Otherwise, it would have been really
chaotic.
We do not know who set the fire, but we know that most of the
refugees had the chance to collect their main belonging before going
away from the burning houses. Nobody was injured. In all, about 850
houses out of 1,400 were completely destroyed as well as the
surrounding latrines and some of the piping for the water system.
What are the living conditions in the camp since the fire?
Following the fire, people slept anywhere they could—in the
remaining houses, in the churches and school buildings, in the
military compound, in the MSF warehouse and clinic, and in some
makeshift emergency shelters. Saturday, several hundred people were
still outside the camp sitting on the road and protesting. They
continued to demand the presence of the UN and say that they will
not return into the camp until UNHCR comes and listens to their
claims. Our team has been supplying plastic sheeting and blankets to
the refugees for the past days. We have also repaired the water
system and are repairing the latrines in order to control the
sanitation
How do you think it came to this situation?
The tension in the camp has been mounting for months since the Thai
authorities conducted a screening process without any independent
oversight and announced the intention of returning all the Hmong
before the end of 2008. We are talking about an already highly
traumatized population. The stress of life in the camp for refugees
who report a long personal history of traumatic events in Laos
continues to intensify in the face of ongoing uncertainty about
their future. Through our mental health program, 96 patients have
been seen for psychological consultation. MSF staff living in the
camp report there are many more whom suffer symptoms of stress but
are not yet referred.
Nearly every day, new faces come to the consultation room door and
ask to be seen. Of those seen, 93 percent report a lifetime of loss,
torture, running, hiding, and starving in the mountainous jungles of
Laos. Patients present extensive documents showing photos of the
dead and relatives in military uniforms, papers showing the family’s
connection to the US Central Intelligence Agency during the
US-Vietnam War, and maps of hiding places and routes of escape from
attacks. While many details differ, the elements are quite
consistent. Of the 96 patients seen for consultation by our
psychologist nearly 50 percent threaten suicide if they are forced
to return to Laos.
Have there been other episodes to heighten tension in the camp?
This is just latest serious incident in the camp. On February 27,
2008, four Hmong families—11 individuals—were sent back to Laos.
According to Thai authorities, the four families were registered on
a list of voluntary returnees. But statements given to MSF from
witnesses in the camp do not corroborate this account. On that day,
Thai soldiers examined their registration cards and screened them.
They then separated 12 people from the group and had them board
military vehicles. According to these witnesses, several people were
clearly being forced to board the vehicles. A woman with 5 children,
ages 2 to 15, was compelled to leave even though her children were
still in the camp, making the claim that she was returning
voluntarily to Laos doubtful. She managed to escape and her
whereabouts remain unknown. She is still separated from her children
in the camp.
Additionally, alleged abuses perpetrated against Lao Hmong refugees
who have been forcibly returned to Laos have intensified the stress
and anxiety among the people in the camp. In December 2005, 27 Lao
Hmong children (5 boys and 22 girls) from Huai Nam Khao were
arrested by the Thai police and sent back by force to Laos. Twelve
of the girls managed to come back to Thailand and join their parents
in the camp in May 2007. They told MSF staff of enduring repeated
beatings, rapes, and other abuses during their detention in Laos.
Ten girls and five boys are still in Laos, their whereabouts and
fates unknown. Such incidents have only heightened anxieties among
the population living in the camp.
What is MSF calling on the governments of Laos and Thailand to
do?
Because of the credible fear among the Lao Hmong refugees in the
Huai Nam Khao camp, MSF is urgently calling upon the governments of
Thailand and Laos to stop the forced repatriation proceedings
against the Hmong refugees in Huai Nam Khao until an independent,
third party can review the government's screening process and
refugee status determinations. And if repatriations are to take
place, we are also asking both governments to allow an independent,
third party to assess the areas of return and the adequacy of
assistance offered, monitor all repatriations, verify the voluntary
nature of returns, and continued safety of returnees. International
standards state that repatriation cannot be forced or imposed on
individuals fearing for their safety and any repatriation must
remain linked to guarantees for safety upon return. For the Lao
Hmong refugees, none of these conditions have been met by either the
governments of Thailand and Laos.
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