Laos Preparing Charges Against Deported Hmong Resistance Leader

2014-07-07
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Thai soldiers stand guard during an operation to deport thousands of Hmong to Laos from a refugee camp in Huay Nam Khao in a file photo.
Thai soldiers stand guard during an operation to deport thousands of Hmong to Laos from a refugee camp in Huay Nam Khao in a file photo.
AFP

Lao authorities said Monday that they are investigating longstanding charges against a former ethnic minority Hmong resistance leader facing prosecution after being deported from neighboring Thailand.

A Lao security official, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed that Moua Toua Ter was deported home on June 23 from Thailand and that he was “under investigation” for charges Lao authorities had leveled against him many years ago.

He did not provide further details, including the nature of the charges.

Moua was among Hmongs who had fought for the United States, alongside American troops, during the Vietnam War.

He had been on the run in the jungles of Laos for more than two decades before  sheltering in Thailand for eight years while seeking resettlement in a third country.

Officials from Thailand's Immigration Police told The Associated Press last week that Moua was deported after being held in Bangkok since March last year.

Rights groups had raised concerns that he will face persecution in his homeland.

Conviction

AP said that Moua Toua Ter's case was complicated by a manslaughter conviction in Thailand, after he shot dead a Laotian woman in what he claimed was self-defense.

His supporters said the woman was a Laotian government agent sent to lure him back to Laos, according to the report, which said that several opponents of the communist regime in Laos had been killed under mysterious circumstances in Thailand or disappeared on visits to their homeland.

Moua served his sentence in the northern Thai province of Tak until March last year, after which he was transferred to the immigration jail in Bangkok.  

The Thai immigration officer who spoke to AP from Nong Khai said that Moua, like others who illegally enter Thailand, was "repatriated through the natural border," meaning he was sent on a boat across the Mekong River marking the nations' boundary.

Facing persecution

Lao authorities have long been wary of opposition among the Hmong, many of whom say they face persecution from the government because of their Vietnam War-era ties with the United States.

Thousands of Hmong fought under CIA advisers during a so-called “secret war” against communists in Laos.

General Vang Pao, who spearheaded the 15-year CIA-sponsored war, died in the United States in 2011 at the age of 81.

The outspoken opponent of the Lao government immigrated to the United States after the communists seized power in his country in 1975.

Reported by RFA’s Lao Service. Written in English by Di Hoa Le.

Comments (18)
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ANY

Hmong are not mercenaries, they were guerrilla fighters. The U.S.A forever will be guilty for what they have done, they are as guilty as Lao and Vietnamese for contributing to the genocide, and denying the truth.

May 18, 2018 09:14 AM

jane

anonymous, think before you write something extremely stupid and offensive for it's sheer stupidity. Hmong were not mercenaries in the secret war.

Nov 13, 2015 08:13 PM

Lao Citizen

from Laos

If Moua Toua Ter died, the USA is guilty of his life.

Oct 04, 2014 06:33 AM

Scott

from Fresno

Check your facts Anonymous, they were not mercenaries for hire. ...


[This comment has been edited by RFA Editorial staff per our Terms of Use]

Aug 08, 2014 02:00 PM

Hmong Doberman

The so-called Hmong people are the most gullible and the most misused folk in the world. Anyone who'd pay or promise them a paradise they'll fight for him like the fiercest dobermans. Today the war is shifting back to the Balkan, the Near East and Africa and the fiercest dobermans are abandoned like the most rabid hounds. Poor gullible folk!

Jul 24, 2014 12:46 PM

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