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Post Info TOPIC: Damage from tropical storm Haima nears 700b kip
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Damage from tropical storm Haima nears 700b kip
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The damage from tropical storm Haima has reached about 700 billion kip, according to the latest assessment by government authorities.

The storm hit Laos on June 24, causing widespread flooding and landslides in mountainous areas, with the death toll standing at 17 people, including eight in Xieng Khuang province, five in Vientiane province, two in Xayaboury province and two in Borikhamxay provinc e.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs held a meeting with diplomatic staff from various countries as well as concerned non-government agencies in Vientiane on Friday to address the situation.

With the cost of the damage continuing to mount, the government hopes to mobilise assistance from friendly nations and international organisations to provide relief to affected people.

Ministry of Foreign Affairs Office Head Mr Vichit Xindavong told the meeting that the storm destroyed more than 300 houses and 6,000 hectares of farmland throughout the country, and devastated critical infrastucture including roads, bridges, schools and hospitals.

Many thousands of people were affected by the storm. The government has mobilised assistance from both the public and private sectors, but the scale of the disaster means they will require international assistance to repair the damages

http://www.vientianetimes.org.la/FreeContent/free_Damage.htm



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Subject: Foreign press urged to expose lack of free expression in Laos

ASEAN Summit - Foreign press urged to expose lack of free expression in Laos and plight of jailed local guides
Published on 26 November 2004

.Two Australian journalists - a reporter for the AAP press agency and a reporter from the daily The Australian Financial Review - were briefly arrested by Laotian security services on the sidelines of the ASEAN summit. Police arrested the two as they trying to take pictures of the Friendship Bridge, which Australia money helped build, and took them to a police station where their passports were confiscated. A police officer told them it was forbidden to photograph the bridge since two rockets exploded in the area on 26 November. The army prevented a journalist from the AP news agency from approaching the scene of the explosion.


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26.11.2004
Reporters Without Borders urged the international press heading to Laos for the 10-country Association of East Asian Nations (ASEAN) summit to seize the opportunity to investigate lack of political rights there, particularly free expression.


Nearly 800 journalists are expected for the summit in Vientiane on 29-30 November, but the local press will be strictly limited in what it can cover, since journalists on the written press and online media are employees of the information and culture ministry.

The party newspaper Paxaxon (People) bills itself as a "revolutionary publication written by the people and for the people which serves the revolution’s political action." The foreign ministry also has a say in media content. Criticism of the "friendly countries," especially the Vietnamese big brother and Burma, is banned. And anyone caught "disseminating information that weakens the state" can be given a long prison sentence under the criminal code.

In the two months leading up to the summit, interior ministry agents have swooped on thousands of homes to check if the occupants owned short wave radios that would allow them to listen to Laos-language programmes on foreign radio stations.

Thousands of police and soldiers have been deployed in the streets of the capital to provide security and Reuters reported that foreign press photographers have been prevented from taking photos in public places.

Reporters Without Borders also recalled that two Laotians from the Hmong minority are currently imprisoned in Vientiane, who served as guides to European reporters Thierry Falise and Vincent Reynaud in 2003. Thao Moua and Pa Phue Khang were sentenced on 30 June 2003 to prison terms of 12-20 years.

Thierry Falise and Vincent Reynaud continue to lobby for the release of their guides who only tried "to make the humanitarian disaster experienced by some of the Hmong people better known". Reporters Without Borders urges Vientiane to free the guides who have not taken part in any violence.

For years, the foreign press has been prevented from covering this minority, particularly those living in isolated groups in the jungle who continue to battle the government. Amnesty International has reported that many civilians, particularly children, have died since 2003 "from lack of food or from wounds suffered during the conflict".

"The press was prevented from investigating claims in 2004, shown on an amateur video, that Laotian soldiers raped and murdered four young Hmong in the Xaisomboune military zone.

Reporters Without Borders also called for the release of Thongpaseuth Keuakoun, author of numerous articles and pamphlets about the situation in Laos and the need for democratic reforms, who was sentenced in 2002 to 20 years in prison for "anti-government activities". He was held secretly after his arrest, in 1999.


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