Thailand and Laos Planning Mass Repatriations of N. Korean Refugees
[Update: Please click the comment link, look for the “Digg” link at the bottom of the post, and Digg. The e-mail address of the Thai Embassy is info@thaiembdc.org.]
Two e-mail messages in as many days convey some very bad news about North Korean refugees in two Southeast Asian nations, Thailand and Laos. Both nations, apparently seeing no U.S. objection and a new U.S. disinterest in the subject of human rights for North Koreans generally, are catching refugees and are planning to send them to their deaths, or a fate worse than. A reader writes:
Just caught this story on naver – It seems about 52 defectors have been aprehended by Thai authorities and if convicted of entering the country illegally are expected to be sent back to North Korea. [Joongang Ilbo, Korean link]
That would be the first mass repatriation of North Koreans by Thailand, and a grave develpment indeed. Then, this via Human Rights Without Frontiers:
The refugees had entered Laos on the 20th of March from China and after being released by the border police took refuge in the mountains. After descending to look for food and medical attention they were again arrested and four were detained, the remaining four continued on to the capital but were arrested en route. They are now awaiting their repatriation to China and subsequently to North Korea .
All eight are women; one is just 14. The oldest is 66.
Hello? Amnesty? Human Rights Watch? U.N.? Their answering machines say they’re all doing halal inspections of the food at Gitmo and checking the azimuth on the Mecca markers on the cell floors. Meanwhile, dozens of innocent people are about to be sent to a fate worse than death and nobody gives a damn. The mind-numbing hypocrisy of it all, the absolute callous disinterest in human suffering by those who claim to be the most compassionate, is the single most discouraging thing about writing this blog. I’ve inserted Lao Embassy contacts in six nations below the break line, but the Thai situation is more grave because of the number of persons and the precedent it sets.
Lao Embassy in Australia
Embassy of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic
1 Dalmain Crescent O’Malley Canberra ACT 2606
Tel: (+61 6) 286-4595, 286-6933
Fax: (+61 6) 290-1910.
Lao Embassy in Belgium
Embassy of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic
Avenue Brabançonne 19 1000 Brussels
Tel: +32-(0)2-740.09.50
Fax: +32-(0)2-734.16.16
Email: Ambalaobx@yucom.be
Lao Embassy in France (covering the UK as well)
His Excellency Mr Soutsakhone Pathammavong
Embassy of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic
74 Avenue Raymond-Poincaré 75116 Paris
Fax: 00 33 145530298
Email: ambalaoparis@wanadoo.fr
Lao Embassy in Japan
Embassy of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic
3-3-22 Nishi-Azabu Minato-Ku
Tokyo 106
Tel: (+81 3) 5411-2291, 5411-2292
Fax: (+81 3) 5411-2293
Lao Embassy in Sweden
Embassy of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic
Hornsgatan 82-B1 TR 11721 Stockholm
Tel: (+46 8) 668-5122
Fax: (+46 8) 669-2176.
Lao Embassy in the US
Embassy of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic
2222 S Street NW Washington DC 20008
Tel. (202) 332-6416
Fax: (202) 332-4923
16 Responses
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And why isn’t the US taking these people in since as you’ve pointed out repeatedly, Congress kind of passed laws saying we would?
Working on these videos this week, it struck me how little material there is to really work with on the plight of refugees and those trapped in NK.
As an exercise for anybody reading this — go to google’s image search page and search for North Korea Refugee.
NK has not only been very good at keeping info from the outside world out, it has kept closed the inside as well.
You have to be willing to read texts to discover the tyranny, and so many people today don’t read.
Besides the sheer humaneness of taking in the refugees, they are great sources of information in a variety of ways.
Laos is one of those communist countries, in the same league as Cambodia and Vietnam. The Laotian government has killed hundreds of thousands of its own ctizens. Why would they give a hoot about North Korean refugees?
So much for the 1951 United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and the supplemental Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees of 1967. May as well cut it into thin strips, put it on rolls, and call it Charmin.
This is the unfortunate result of international law becoming the hostage of tribalism. It becomes meaningless.