HANOI - UNEXPLODED ordnance has killed or wounded 50,000 people in Laos, says a survey billed as the most comprehensive of its kind.
Munitions killed 30,000 and wounded 20,000 between 1964 and 2007, said Mike Boddington, an adviser to the Lao UXO National Regulatory Authority, an internationally-funded government-UN agency. 'We found far more victims than we expected,' he told AFP.
Mr Boddington said 60 per cent of the 50,000 casualties occurred between 1964 and 1973, during US wartime involvement in the region. Laos became the world's most heavily bombed country per head of population.
US bombers targeting Vietnamese and Lao communist forces flew about 80,000 missions over the country in the 1960s and 70s. UN data says more explosives were dropped in Laos than in Europe during World War II but many failed to explode.
The National Regulatory Authority sent researchers to every district in the country. They visited more than 9,100 villages, working with village chiefs to identify victims who were then surveyed, Mr Boddington said. 'We collected over 50,000 questionnaires,' he said.
The survey was designed to gather data only about unexploded ordnance casualties, rather than those killed or wounded during wartime bomb strikes. Mr Boddington said the survey data aims to help in clearance of the unexploded munitions, creating community awareness of the danger, and in victim assistance. -- AFP
This is an old news and hope the US give more money to clear up.
US ups aid to clear unexploded bombs in Laos
By Frederic J. Frommer, Associated Press
WASHINGTON -- Nearly 30 years after the end of the Vietnam War, the United States is increasing aid to help remove unexploded ordnance that continues to kill people in the former war zone, especially in Laos, where 2 million tons of bombs were dropped.
The United States has agreed to nearly double the amount of aid it provides to help remove those bombs, known as unexploded ordnance, or UXO. Congress approved $2.5 million for bomb removal in Laos next year, up from $1.4 million, as part of a move to normalize trade relations with the impoverished Southeast Asian country.
The United States bombed Laos relentlessly for about a decade in an effort to cut off North Vietnamese supply lines. Though the war ended in 1975, the carnage from those bombings continues.
Nearly a third of the bombs failed to explode, becoming "de facto antipersonnel mines," according to a Human Rights Watch report. The bombs have killed some 6,000 Laotians since the end of the fighting.
"Every time I go to Laos I meet fresh bomb victims who have lost an eye or a leg or two," said Jim Harris, a retired Wisconsin school principal who helps educate people about the experience of Laotian refugees in his state.
US pilots dropped 2 million tons of bombs on Laos from 1964 to 1973, double the amount dropped on Germany in World War II.
Some critics have opposed the improved trade relations and the increase in funding for bomb removal. They said Laos continues to persecute its Hmong minority, who fought alongside the CIA during the Vietnam War.
"Why should the US taxpayer pay to remove land mines and unexploded ordnance from the Vietnam War when the Lao government and military are involved in military operations against the Hmong people?" asked Philip Smith, the Washington director of Lao Veterans of America.
But Representative Betty McCollum, Democrat of Minnesota, said the United States "has a moral obligation to partner with the people of Laos to help eliminate the ordnance and put the land back into productive use for this impoverished nation."
Many of the Hmong people who fled Laos settled in Minnesota and Wisconsin.
While the Laotian government is in charge of bomb removal, it relies on help from other countries and groups to help pay for it. The Laotian bomb-removal agency, UXO Lao, was at a crisis point a couple of years ago.
"Money wasn't coming in in sufficient numbers, and UXO Lao had to let go of half of its employees," said Douglas A. Hartwick, the US ambassador to Laos from 2001 until July. "So there was a big push on the part of donors and the Lao government to put together a long-term coherent strategy to clean up the unexploded bombs."
The agency's annual budget is about $4 million, according to its website. Officials with UXO Lao did not respond to e-mails seeking comment.
Hartwick said the process to remove explosives, using metal detectors, is painstakingly slow.
"You're getting constant hits with a metal detector," Hartwick said. "You've got shrapnel like you wouldn't believe, plus bullets, mortars, and grenades."
The Mine Advisory Group, a nongovernmental organization in Great Britain that helps destroy land mines and unexploded ordnance worldwide, is one of several private groups that receive US money for work in Laos.
Sean Sutton, the group's spokesman, said "it's welcome news that the United States is doing more to help."
When he was visiting Laos in October, seven people were killed when a man hit a bomb while chopping wood, he said. A few days later, he said, two boys were killed when playing with cluster bomblets, which are as big as tennis balls.
He said many of the injuries and fatalities occur when poor Laotians are attracted to the explosives in search of scrap
I think $$$ it is not enough , it is said we can't clear it in this generation, there are so many many in the jungle and some are under the house or hut.
I think $$$ it is not enough , it is said we can't clear it in this generation, there are so many many in the jungle and some are under the house or hut.
The United States and south Korea are willing to give more money to clean up the bombs but the money have been frozen because the Lao government supported north Korea nuclear and missil programs and also supported Iran nuclear program.
25.07.2009 19:23:18 Laos communist party and foreign ministry officials as well as Lao Peoples Army (LPA) military officers have repeatedly visited NorthKorea in recent months in support of NorthKorea’s nuclear weapons development program and one-party, Marxist-Leninist regime. The LPDR regime in Laos is a staunch supporter and key ally of the ...
I think $$$ it is not enough , it is said we can't clear it in this generation, there are so many many in the jungle and some are under the house or hut.
The United States and south Korea are willing to give more money to clean up the bombs but the money have been frozen because the Lao government supported north Korea nuclear and missil programs and also supported Iran nuclear program.
25.07.2009 19:23:18 Laos communist party and foreign ministry officials as well as Lao Peoples Army (LPA) military officers have repeatedly visited NorthKorea in recent months in support of NorthKorea’s nuclear weapons development program and one-party, Marxist-Leninist regime. The LPDR regime in Laos is a staunch supporter and key ally of the ...
no way!! Lao government doesn't support the North korea for nuclear program , i am quite sure that the LPA just want to co-operate more with the N.Korea so LPA can buy the weapon from them and at least- when Laos has a war or conflict with thailand, at least N.korea can support Laos in weapon.
I think $$$ it is not enough , it is said we can't clear it in this generation, there are so many many in the jungle and some are under the house or hut.
The United States and south Korea are willing to give more money to clean up the bombs but the money have been frozen because the Lao government supported north Korea nuclear and missile programs and also supported Iran nuclear program.
25.07.2009 19:23:18 Laos communist party and foreign ministry officials as well as Lao Peoples Army (LPA) military officers have repeatedly visited NorthKorea in recent months in support of NorthKorea’s nuclear weapons development program and one-party, Marxist-Leninist regime. The LPDR regime in Laos is a staunch supporter and key ally of the ...
no way!! Lao government doesn't support the North korea for nuclear program , i am quite sure that the LPA just want to co-operate more with the N.Korea so LPA can buy the weapon from them and at least- when Laos has a war or conflict with thailand, at least N.korea can support Laos in weapon.
The United nation show which countries would vote for supporting north Korea nuclear program and stop economy sanction against north Korea. So Laos ,Myanmar, Cuba and Venezuela and Iran voted to support north Korea.
I think $$$ it is not enough , it is said we can't clear it in this generation, there are so many many in the jungle and some are under the house or hut.
The United States and south Korea are willing to give more money to clean up the bombs but the money have been frozen because the Lao government supported north Korea nuclear and missile programs and also supported Iran nuclear program.
25.07.2009 19:23:18 Laos communist party and foreign ministry officials as well as Lao Peoples Army (LPA) military officers have repeatedly visited NorthKorea in recent months in support of NorthKorea’s nuclear weapons development program and one-party, Marxist-Leninist regime. The LPDR regime in Laos is a staunch supporter and key ally of the ...
no way!! Lao government doesn't support the North korea for nuclear program , i am quite sure that the LPA just want to co-operate more with the N.Korea so LPA can buy the weapon from them and at least- when Laos has a war or conflict with thailand, at least N.korea can support Laos in weapon.
The United nation show which countries would vote for supporting north Korea nuclear program and stop economy sanction against north Korea. So Laos ,Myanmar, Cuba and Venezuela and Iran voted to support north Korea.
That made south Korea president was up set. South Korea used to mention with Lao government would like to build Hyundai auto assembly in Laos but move to Cambodia instead.When south Korea president visited southeast Asia, as Cambodia ,Vietnam and Thailand but Laos and Myanmar because Laos and Myanmar support north Korea nuclear and missile program.