I wonder if she just pretend to say good infront of Lao media, so that they will release her daughter? the news from Lao side and UK side are totally different, why?
Mother of British prisoner says Samantha looking well
Jane Orobator, mother of British national Samantha Orobator-Oghagbon, who has been in detention in Vientiane since last August on charges of drug trafficking, was pleased with the appearance of her daughter, whom she has visited twice in prison.
She said her daughter was looking well and she believed Samantha would get a fair trial in a Lao court.
“Samantha is looking well, she has no problems.”
Ms Orobator talked to Vientiane Times reporters in her first meeting with the Lao press yesterday since arriving in Vientiane two weeks ago.
Before coming to Laos , she said she had heard rumours about the treatment her daughter had received while in prison. Now she was in Laos she could see for herself the situation was different.
Some initial fears about the fairness of the Lao system and associated authorities had been allayed by her visit, she said. Those fears had been based on limited information.
“All (the information) I was getting came from the Internet,” she said.
Asked if she believed her daughter would get a fair trial, she said she thought she would.
“Yes, I think so because now that I have seen everything with my own eyes… I can see she is not being maltreated,” Ms Orobator said.
She said communication with her daughter had allowed her greater peace of mind.
“So now that I'm here, at least I know she will get a fair trial.”
Jane Orobator visited her daughter on May 19 for the second time and expressed her appreciation to the Lao authorities for giving permission for the visit.
Ms Samantha Orobator-Oghagbon was arrested at Wattay International Airport in Vientiane on August 5, 2008, on her way to Sydney, Australia, after 680 grammes of heroin, contained in 68 capsules, were found hidden on her body.
No exact date has yet been given for Samantha's trial because the Lao authorities need more time to uncover the full facts about her pregnancy.
Director of the Drug Control Department of the Ministry of Public Security, Lt. Col. Khamphonh Sihaphancha, said recently the case of Samantha Orobator-Oghagbon needed further investigation to discover how she became pregnant while in prison.
Her pregnancy attracted a great deal of attention in the foreign press, with reports circulating that she had been raped by prison guards.
Her mother Jane made it clear to Vientiane Times her daughter had not been raped or sexually assaulted while in prison and the father of her unborn child was not a Lao prison guard.
During the interview, Ms Orobator asked the authorities to speed up her daughter's case so it could come to trial as soon as possible.
“I want to beg you all to hear the cry of a mother,” she said with tears in her eyes.
Under Lao Criminal Law, a pregnant woman cannot receive the death penalty. This means that Ms Orobator-Oghagbon, even if found guilty, would not receive the death penalty because of her pregnancy.
By Phonekeo Vorakhoun Vientianetimes
News from UK side
Vientiane, Laos - You can sense it in their agitated voices and exasperated expressions. They wish she wasn't in their prison, they wish she wasn't in their country, and they probably wish she had never been caught when she tried to board a plane in Vientiane last August with 680 grams of heroin allegedly hidden beneath her clothes.
For the Communist officials who run Laos, the case of 20-year-old Briton Samantha Orobator - awaiting trial on heroin smuggling charges that could technically still bring her the death penalty - has become an embarrassment that this landlocked South-East Asian backwater could do without.
What started out as a straightforward case of a young foreign woman acting with what appears to have been crass stupidity has instead brought the harsh light of international scrutiny on a controlling and secretive regime.
The thing that has made Orobator's case a human rights issue is not the manner of her arrest or the conditions in which she is being held in Vientiane's notoriously tough Phonthong Prison. Rather, it is the fact that, eight months after her arrest, she is now five months pregnant.
The Laos government refuses to say how she became pregnant but insists stubbornly it is 'impossible' that she might have been raped inside jail or made pregnant by a prison guard, still defying logic in some interviews to claim she has been pregnant since before her arrest.
Orobator was made to sign a statement in prison declaring she had not been raped and that the father of her baby was not from Laos shortly after her pregnancy was confirmed in March.
A hasty, behind-closed-doors trial now looks likely to take place, possibly within days, after which Laos is expected to hand Orobator over to British embassy officials so that she can be flown home to serve out a prison sentence in the United Kingldom.
Little is known about what led Orobator, a Nigerian-born British citizen described by friends as extremely bright with ambitions to become a doctor, to fly to Thailand and then to Laos where she spent five days before her arrest at Wattaya Airport on August 5 last year.
To the huge annoyance of government officials, however, far more attention has been devoted to the question of how she got pregnant in prison than why she may have tried to smuggle drugs out of Laos - and it is a question to which they are unwilling or unable to give a satisfactory answer.
'This case is not about babies - it is about heroin,' chief government spokesman Kenthong Nuanthasing said with a tone of rising annoyance. 'She signed a statement to say she was not raped. She did not have intercourse with any man in prison. There is no male close to her during her time in prison. All the prisoners are women and all the guards are female.'
Asked who could have fathered the baby, he raised his eyes to the ceiling and said with an impatient laugh: 'Maybe it is a baby from the sky like [the Virgin] Mary.'
So why was she made to sign a statement denying she was raped without explaining the truth of her pregnancy? Nuanthasing said: 'We don't want the outside world to blame us (for her pregnancy). That is why we asked her to write a letter to certify that she was not raped and the baby inside her is not a Lao baby.'
Nuanthasing made it clear that in order to return home to the Britain, Orobator will be expected to confirm at her trial the statement she signed in prison. 'She will tell the court - otherwise she will stay here,' he said. 'Her court case will be dissolved.'
Such a delay could mean Orobator's trial being delayed until after she gives birth and Nuanthasing stressed that the threat of a death sentence could still be invoked as she is only exempt from the death penalty while she is pregnant under Lao law. 'Nobody can guarantee she will not face the firing squad,' he said.
The Laos government insists Orobator is being held in an all-female prison. In fact, Phonthong Prison on the outskirts of Vientiane holds male and female prisoners in separate blocks and has both male and female guards living in shabby quarters in the grounds outside.
A French former inmate who spent five months in the same prison over a business dispute, said, 'As soon as I read about the case of Samantha Orobator, I knew it must have been a prison guard who got her pregnant.
'Female prisoners are fair game for the guards there. They weren't exactly raped but they were coerced into sex with promises. The guards would tell them they could get them off the death penalty or get them or shorter sentence, or make life inside more comfortable for them.'
'There is no humanity and no compassion in that place. It is a place where you are made to feel as if you are nothing. You are completely cut off from the outside world and you're left begging for the smallest sign of hope, the slightest promise of something better.'
Orobator's mother Jane, who lives in Dublin, visited her daughter in the company of government officials and issued a statement afterwards to say her daughter had told her she was not raped and that the father is not a prison guard.
That statement, while failing to resolve the nagging questions about Orobator's pregnancy, will have pleased the Vientiane government and may help speed up the process of her trial and deportation.
Human rights lawyer Anna Morris, who spent a fortnight in Laos helping her government-appointed Lao lawyer prepare for the case, said: 'We will only know the truth about her pregnancy when she is home in Britain. Our priority is to get her home as soon as possible.'