email this page    print    RSS

Field news

Support our work by making a donation today.

Where we are working


More from Thailand

ABC PM: MSF leaves Thailand

The medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières is withdrawing in protest from Thailand due to a stalemate with the Thai government over whether the organisation can treat unregistered migrants, mostly Burmese migrant workers.

Médecins Sans Frontières reluctantly withdraws from Thailand after 35 years

Bangkok/Brussels/Sydney- 5 October, 2011: Persisting needs among undocumented migrants, but Médecins Sans Frontières not permitted to respond.

More on Refugees/IDPs

Sahel: the fate of 160,000 Malian refugees hanging in the balance

In camps in Burkina Faso, Mauritania and Niger, the international aid remains insufficient.

South Sudan facing multiple emergencies - Médecins Sans Frontières supporting health structures near the border with Sudan and assisting displaced people

Tensions and hostilities continue unabated between South Sudan and its northern neighbour Sudan, and Médecins Sans Frontières is scaling up its emergency response by treating people injured in the latest violence, giving material...

JOIN OUR SOCIAL NETWORKS

Facebook
Twitter
Subscribe to me on YouTube

Médecins Sans Frontières denounces Thai Government’s forced repatriation of Hmong refugees to Laos

Thailand, Laos / 31.12.09

Thai authorities are expelling the 4,000 Hmong remaining in the Huai Nam Khao camp in Thailand's Petchabun province to Laos. No third-party organisation is present at the site. Médecins Sans Frontières, which left the camps in May 2009 following military pressure, had denounced the forced repatriation policy.

The expulsion of the 4,000 Hmong, who fled Laos to seek refuge in the Huai Nam Khao camp in Thailand, results from a bilateral agreement between the Laotian and Thai governments, signed in May 2007. The two had stated their intention to repatriate all Hmong to Laos before the end of 2009. The Thai government refuses to recognise the Hmong in the Huai Nam Khao camp as refugees; rather, it considers them illegal immigrants whose repatriation does not violate international law.

Médecins Sans Frontières was the only international humanitarian organisation in the camp as of July 2005. It criticised this situation on several occasions, calling for a halt to the forced repatriations, which accelerated in December 2008 with 200 expulsions occurring every month. Médecins Sans Frontières considered this population to be vulnerable and asked the Thai government to undertake a case-by-case review under the supervision of an independent, recognised third-party organisation such as the UN High Commission on Refugees (UNHCR). That organisation could have evaluated the legitimacy of the Hmong's concerns regarding their return to Laos, where they claimed they were persecuted, and considered their request for protection and refugee status.

According to international law, individuals who fear for their life or safety may not be repatriated by force. In addition, all repatriated individuals must have guarantees as to their safety. Neither of these conditions has been met for the refugees of Huai Nam Khao camp.

"We also hope that an international third-party organisation can evaluate the areas of return and the assistance offered to Laos," says Dr. Marie-Pierre Allié, president of Médecins Sans Frontières France. "These repatriations are taking place without any monitoring. As a result, the voluntary nature of the returns and the longer-term safety of the repatriated individuals cannot be verified."

Despite repeated requests, including from Médecins Sans Frontières and the UNHCR, the Thai government still refuses to undertake a case-by-case pre-repatriation review under the auspices of an independent organisation.

The Laotian government continues to prohibit non-governmental and international organisations from entering the areas in Laos where the Hmong are being repatriated.

After working in the camp for four years, Médecins Sans Frontières ended its activities there in May 2009 as a result of pressure from the Thai army against the Hmong, as well as of increased restrictions on our work (access to treatment and food), which heightened pressure on the refugees to return to Laos.
 
Médecins Sans Frontières provided medical and sanitation assistance to Hmong refugees in the Petchabun camp between July 2005 and May 2009. Throughout that period, Médecins Sans Frontières was the only international organisation in the area in a position of speaking to the situation in the camp.

  

Location Map - Thailand - Laos -


Powered by 29travels