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Visiting the Hmong, America's Forgotten Refugees
By Pha Lo, Pacific News Service
Fifteen thousand Hmong may soon come to the U.S. from a refugee camp
in Thailand, where they have lived suspended lives since fighting for
the CIA in Laos during the Vietnam War. The writer, whose father fought
in the secret war, visits a Hmong family in a small village in Thailand
and asks why some Hmong who fought for America get to emigrate, and
others do not.
NAN PROVINCE, Thailand-March 31, 2004-In August of 2003, news that
America might resettle 15,000 Hmong refugees from a camp in Thailand had
reached an unintended audience. C.V. Her heard about it on the sole
television set shared by his village in the northeastern Thai province
of Nan.
I had come to Southeast Asia to find people like Her, who, much like my
own father, had picked up an American-supplied gun, the first gun he had
ever seen, and donned a uniform to become an overnight soldier in the
CIA's secret army in Laos. My father had watched North Vietnamese
convoys sneak supplies through the Ho Chi Minh Trail, been struck by
debris from an exploding grenade and lost many good friends. But he was
still one of the "lucky" ones who had left Laos and survived life in
Thailand refugee camps to be resettled in Salt Lake City, Utah, where I
was born.
Why, I wanted to know, were people like Mr. Her still living in
Thailand, while others of us made it to America?
Inside his bamboo-thatched home some 15 kilometers from the town center,
Her sits on a wicker stool atop his freshly swept dirt floor and motions
for me to come inside. At first he is reluctant to talk about the war,
fearing retaliation for divulging information. But slowly, he begins to
relate a story he has waited 28 years to tell. He shows me black and
white photographs of himself as a young soldier. They are his personal
documents of service in a secret war.
Her is one of thousands of Hmong men who trained and fought with the
CIA-led effort to combat Communist forces in Northern Laos during the
Vietnam War. They were recruited in the 1960s to help gather
intelligence, rescue downed American pilots and cut off North Vietnamese
forces along the Ho Chi Minh Trail. The Hmong soldiers served in covert
guerilla programs until 1975, when the Communists took official control
of the country. The new government set out to torture, re-educate or
kill anyone who had allied with the United States.
An estimated 30,000 Hmong, including civilians, died in that war, out of
an estimated 250,000 to 300,000 Hmong people in Laos at the time. Many
more fell victim to the genocide that ensued after the Communist
takeover. Desperate families fled by the thousands, on foot, by boat,
or, if they were lucky, on the few U.S. planes that returned for them.
C.V. Her arrived in Thailand with his family in 1975.
Her's wife peers bashfully from behind a cardboard box stuffed with
letters from family in the United States. Inspired by the news, she has
unpacked copies of her original application for resettlement, dated
March 8, 1975, and stamped with a barely legible seal from the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). She has held on to the
tattered document, along with the hope that people have not forgotten
her. She is sending copies to her family, urging them to remind America
that she is waiting for an answer.
But the Her family may have to wait countless more years in vain. The
resettlement policy, announced in December 2003 by the U.S. State
Department, will not include them. It will allow entry for a maximum of
15,000 refugees and is limited to those now living on the Wat Tham
Krobak campgrounds -- a Buddhist temple about an hour and a half from
Bangkok by car. That number is only half of an estimated 30,000 refugees
scattered throughout Northern Thailand. With direct links to the war,
these refugees, just like the Wat ones, are not accepted as Thai
citizens, are not allowed to leave their respective provinces and are
not welcome back in Laos.
The Wat Tham Krobak refugees were considered for resettlement because
many lost UNHCR protection after leaving "established" camps in 1999.
The State Department refuses to speculate on the fate of Hmong refugees
outside of the Wat campgrounds. The department now has a list, compiled
by Thai officials, of those living at Wat Tham Krobak who will be
eligible for resettlement. No new names will be added to that list.
Still, news of the resettlement policy will reach unintended audiences
throughout Thailand. Thousands of people like C.V. Her will renew their
hopes and wait on a policy that has already decided who will go and who
will stay. They will likely spend their lives as squatters, hoping that
the Thai government does not forcibly repatriate them to Laos, a country
with a deep-rooted history of ethnic cleansing practices against the
Hmong.
"It's been such a long time, and we want to see our family," Her's wife
says to me as I make my way out of the village. "When you get home, will
you tell someone about us?"
"Yes," I say. Soon there will be 15,000 other Hmong refugees coming to
America with stories like this family's. They and those still left
behind were American partners, cast away as dispensable tools of war in
an unfortunate history that has claimed their land and left them
stranded. I hope for this new group to never hear the words I have heard
countless times: "Go back to your own country." America is their
country. They are America's refugees.
PNS contributor Pha Lo, 22, is a writer who
traveled to Asia in 2003 to research Hmong refugees.
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