Thieves Attempt to Steal Head of Buddha Statue From Temple in Northern-Central Laos

2015-04-10
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Worshippers at Ongtue Wat in Vientiane pray before two Buddha statues, including the one (R) that Vietnamese bank employees took but later returned, Jan. 10, 2015.
Worshippers at Ongtue Wat in Vientiane pray before two Buddha statues, including the one (R) that Vietnamese bank employees took but later returned, Jan. 10, 2015.
RFA

A group of thieves tried to steal the head of an ancient Buddha statue on Wednesday from a Buddhist pagoda in a province in northern-central Laos, but ran away without the artifact after they were spotted by villagers, said the abbot of the temple where the statue is housed.

The would-be thieves cut off the head of the Buddha statue believed to be 500 years old in Soynangfa temple in Pek district, Xiengkhouang province, placed it on the ground, and ran away when villagers saw what they were doing, Ajarn Khamphan told RFA’s Lao Service.

It was the second time this year that thieves tried to steal the statue, he said. The abbot wasn’t certain how many people were involved in the attempted heist.

“Around two to three months ago there was a group of Vietnamese trying to steal the Buddha statue in this temple, but they were arrested by police,” he said.

The same group of thieves could be the ones who cut off the Buddha statue’s head on Wednesday, he added.

“This statue is over 500 years old, and villagers would like to build a wall around it to prevent it from being stolen,” Ajarn Khamphan said.

The villagers, who have reconnected the head to the statue, plan to build a separate shelter in which to keep the statue safe, he said.

In the meantime, district police are investigating the incident and have increased security inside the temple, he said.

Hands off

A similar incident in January when a Vietnamese made off with a Buddha statue from a temple in the capital Vientiane also raised the ire of local Lao residents.

A Vietnamese bank executive took a Buddha statue believed to be about 500 years old from Ongtue Wat in Mixay village near the Mekong River in Chanthaburi district after the temple’s abbot had agreed to give it to him.

But the heritage department of the country’s Ministry of Information, Culture and Tourism said the statue had been registered for national heritage status, and therefore, should not be taken out of the country.

Employees from the bank returned  the statue to Ongtue Wat later the same day.

But when word got out, locals who live in the area were outraged at what they saw as yet another ploy by the Vietnamese to come into the country and take whatever they want.

The Lao people harbor some animosity towards their much larger neighbor, the second-largest investor in the country after China. Lao critics say the Vietnamese disregard their land rights, their livelihoods and their religious beliefs while profiting at their expense.

Reported by Ounkeo Souksavanh of RFA’s Lao Service. Translated by Ounkeo Souksavanh. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin.

Comments (4)
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Jeff

from Anaheim

That's stupid especially because it is 500 years odl

Apr 21, 2015 09:14 PM

Superman

from Krypton

You are right, let those Vietcongs take all the pra they want. Just keep them away from stealing the Lao land.

Apr 20, 2015 12:22 AM

LAONOR

DON'T WORRY LAO PEOPLE,,IF VIETCONG TAKE YOUR PRA ,DON'T LET VIETCONG TAKE YOUR LAND

Apr 14, 2015 06:58 AM

phetsakhat sorphainam

from vientiane

the lao government respect vietnamese so much even monks at wat ong tue that's why ( keo) were able to steal those buddhas and we should protect that buddhas in the future ( du mae eury )

Apr 11, 2015 10:37 AM

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