Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09BANGKOK2569
2009-10-07 10:23:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Bangkok
Cable title:  

LAO HMONG IN PETCHABUN: TENSIONS FLARE IN CAMP,

Tags:  PREF PHUM SMIG TH LA 
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VZCZCXRO4146
OO RUEHCHI
DE RUEHBK #2569 2801023
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
O 071023Z OCT 09
FM AMEMBASSY BANGKOK
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 8544
INFO RUEHVN/AMEMBASSY VIENTIANE PRIORITY 5753
RUEHCHI/AMCONSUL CHIANG MAI PRIORITY 7124
RUEHGV/USMISSION GENEVA PRIORITY 2165
UNCLAS BANGKOK 002569 

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

DEPT FOR PRM/ANE, EAP/MLS
GENEVA FOR RMA

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PREF PHUM SMIG TH LA
SUBJECT: LAO HMONG IN PETCHABUN: TENSIONS FLARE IN CAMP,
BUT NO SERIOUS INJURIES REPORTED

REF: A. BANGKOK 2042

B. BANGKOK 2041

UNCLAS BANGKOK 002569

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

DEPT FOR PRM/ANE, EAP/MLS
GENEVA FOR RMA

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PREF PHUM SMIG TH LA
SUBJECT: LAO HMONG IN PETCHABUN: TENSIONS FLARE IN CAMP,
BUT NO SERIOUS INJURIES REPORTED

REF: A. BANGKOK 2042

B. BANGKOK 2041


1. (SBU) On October 6 at approximately 7:30 pm local
(Bangkok) time, a small group of Royal Thai Armed Forces
(RTARF) soldiers in the military-run camp for Lao Hmong in
Petchabun fired their weapons in the air to disperse a crowd.
Employees of an NGO in the camp described hearing (but not
witnessing first-hand) 4-5 minutes of firing, building in
crescendo from apparent side arms discharging to bursts of
automatic weapons. By the end of day on October 7, no
injured Hmong or soldiers had been brought to the clinic
overseen by the NGO Catholic Organization for Emergency
Relief and Refugees (COERR). COERR employees were able to
enter the Petchabun camp as usual on the morning of October
7, and reported that the situation was "calm" with no
evidence of additional troop movements.


2. (SBU) Two versions of the events leading up to the
shooting incident - the first since the camp was opened in
July 2007- were offered by the Lao Hmong detainees, and by
the RTARF. A Hmong leader in the Petchabun facility told
RefCoord that the RTARF entered the camp and attempted to
arrest a 62-year old "ex-CIA fighter" for deportation to
Laos, and that the soldiers were quickly surrounded by
outraged neighbors. Feeling threatened, warning shots were
fired in the air, and the RTARF departed the camp without the
intended arrestee or injuries to either side. Senior army
commanders in Petchabun were not willing to discuss the
incident with post, but soldiers involved told COERR that a
routine patrol in the camp had been followed by a group of
Hmong teenagers. The patrol searched the teenagers'
belongings, and discovered a knife. An attempt to arrest the
teenager quickly drew a large crowd, shots fired were over
the Hmong's heads, and the patrol retreated to the camp
entrance. The RTARF claimed a scuffle with members of the
crowd occurred which resulted in minor injuries to two
soldiers. COERR described the mood of the RTARF as "angry"
the day after the incident.


3. (SBU) Comment. Tensions are likely to continue to
increase in the Petchabun camp as RTARF-organized "voluntary"
returns gradually drain the camp population, and a core group
of Hmong unwilling to repatriate to Laos becomes exposed. The
Royal Thai Government (RTG) itself estimated in a January
2008 accounting that about 800-1,000 Hmong will not want to
return. Assuming that none of this group was repatriated in
the interim, the RTG's conservative guess suggests that about
one-quarter of the current population of 4,000-plus remaining
Hmong will resist any effort to move them.
ENTWISTLE