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THAILAND: STOP FORCED RETURNS
TO LAOS
Forced Repatriations of Hmong to Laos Should End
March 5, 2008 – (Human Rights Watch) The
Thai government should stop forcibly returning Hmong asylum seekers
to Laos without independent monitoring or refugee screening, Human
Rights Watch said today.
On February 27, Thai soldiers used police dogs to force 12 Lao Hmong
from a camp in Petchabun province onto trucks for repatriation to
Laos, according to Radio Free Asia’s Lao service. The military
authorities later allowed a mother of five to return to the camp
and call to her children over a megaphone, but the children hid
from the authorities. In a televised ceremony on February 28, the
other 11 ethnic Hmong were handed over to Laotian authorities. The
Department of Border Affairs deputy director, Major General Voravit
Darunchoo, told reporters that the 11 “wholeheartedly volunteered
to go back to their country.” The repatriation took place
just before an official visit to Laos by Thailand’s new Prime
Minister Samak Sundaravej.
“The Thai government’s claim that these were ‘volunteers’
who wanted to return to Laos is highly dubious,” said Bill
Frelick, refugee policy director at Human Rights Watch. “Volunteers
don’t need police dogs to coax them onto trucks.”
his forced repatriation was just the latest in a series of joint
actions by Laotian and Thai military authorities in violation of
international standards for the protection of asylum seekers fleeing
persecution. Under customary international law, the principle of
non-refoulement protects people from being sent back to countries
where their lives or liberty would be threatened.
In May 2007, the Thai government denied the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) permission to conduct refugee
status determinations in Thailand, insisting that it would screen
asylum seekers itself.
“Without a fair and transparent procedure to screen refugees,
Human Rights Watch considers Thailand’s forcible return of
these 11 Hmong to Laos as refoulement, a violation of its international
law obligations,” Frelick said. Since the 1970s, the Laotian
authorities have targeted ethnic Hmong in Laos and subjected them
to arbitrary arrest and detention, torture, sexual violence, and
extrajudicial killings.
Human Rights Watch noted that in 2005 the UN Human Rights Committee,
the expert body that monitors state compliance with the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, expressed concern about
the imminent deportation of Hmong refugees and asylum seekers in
Petchabun province to Laos, where they feared persecution.
Following a September 2007 meeting, the Thai and Lao governments
reaffirmed their commitment to repatriate the 8,000 Hmong in the
Petchabun camp by the end of 2008 (to view a Medicins Sans Frontieres
briefing paper on the situation of the 8,000 Hmong in Petchabun
province, please click here).
In February 2008, Thai Foreign Minister Noppadon Pattama said that
the governments of Thailand and Laos had tasked their respective
defense ministries to arrange for repatriation of Hmong to Laos
at the rate of about 200 returnees per month. The agreement does
not provide for international agencies to observe the repatriation
process.
“Given plans of Thai and Lao defense officials to repatriate
thousands of Hmong refugees by the end of this year, the forcible
return of these 11 people last week should sound a grave warning,”
said Frelick.
The agreement builds on a May 2007 Thailand-Laos border security
accord that allows Thailand to send Hmong asylum seekers back to
Laos upon arrival in Thailand. Later that same month, Thailand forcibly
returned 31 Hmong to Laos. On June 9, 2007, 163 Hmong asylum seekers
were rounded up and forcibly driven back over the border. In August
2007, then-Thai Prime Minister Gen. Surayud Chulanont made his government’s
position clear, stating: “If we don’t deal with this
problem, we will have to be home to more illegal immigrants. It
is a burden in every way for us.”
The Thai government denies nearly all requests by representatives
of foreign governments, UN agencies, journalists, and nongovernmental
organizations for entrance into the fenced-off facility in Petchabun
province where roughly 8,000 Hmong are currently restricted. The
authorities denied a Human Rights Watch visit to the camp in mid-2007.
UNHCR personnel are also barred from the camp. The only organization
that is allowed into the facility, Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF),
currently provides all services for the Hmong living there.
About 150 UNHCR-recognized Hmong refugees are locked up at the Immigration
Detention Center in Nong Khai province in cramped and degrading
conditions where they have repeatedly faced the threat of deportation
to Laos, despite pledges of foreign governments to resettle them
elsewhere.
Thailand is not a party to the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status
of Refugees or its 1967 Protocol. However, Human Rights Watch noted
that under customary international law, the Thai government has
an obligation of non-refoulement.
From:http://hrw.org/english/docs/2008/03/05/thaila18211.htm
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