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Peace at any cost is a prelude to war!


 APOCALYPSE NOW
'Killing fields,'
mines and martyrs
Part 2 of WND's investigative report
on betrayal of Hmong tribe

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By Anthony C. LoBaido
� 1999 WorldNetDaily.com

Editor's note: This is the second part of Anthony C. LoBaido's three-part
investigative series on the Hmong hill tribes of Laos and Vietnam. In Part 1,
"THE GREAT BETRAYAL," IN WEDNESDAY EDITION WorldNetDaily's roving
international reporter revealed how the Hmong, since serving valiantly
alongside American servicemen in the Vietnam war, have been betrayed by the
U.S. government, persecuted by the Laotian government, and are now being
forced at gunpoint by U.N. soldiers to return from Thai refugee camps to
their native Laos before Dec. 31 -- to almost certain death. In this report,
LoBaido reveals the many "dirty little secrets" he uncovered during his
investigations while traveling through Laos, the most heavily landmined
country on earth.



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VIENTIANE, Laos People's Democratic Republic -- The group of 50 men, women
and children huddled together in the basement of a spooky, abandoned French
colonial mansion smiled brightly at the arrival of the Western missionary.

"Did you bring them?" one Laotian woman asked her. "I pray that you did."

"Yes, by the grace of God, yes," replied the man, before he pulled out two
videotapes from his knapsack. One was the Christian classic, "The Robe." The
other, its sequel, "Demetrius and the Gladiators."

The idea of Christians hiding out from authorities in the basement of a
haunted house to watch old Hollywood films might seem preposterous to
Americans, but in Stalinist Laos it is a fact of life.
Several Loatian princesses gather at a ceremony in Luang Prabang.

"The lions are back," said Karen LaSalle, a 26-year-old, striking redheaded,
French evangelical missionary who has been working in Laos for three years.

"Persecution of Christians, especially the Hmong tribe, is very great in
Laos. While we feel no ill will personally towards our persecutors, we must
take precautions to protect ourselves," she said.

The Hmong are especially hated by the Pathet Lao for their alliances with the
French and later the Americans during the Vietnam war. The Pathet Lao word
for Hmong is "Meo," which means, literally, "less than human."

So why are the besieged Christians in LaSalle's fold so powerfully attracted
to these two films in particular?

"I believe people want to be inspired," answered LaSalle, "and as Lenin said,
film is the greatest tool ever invented to influence the masses."

"'The Robe' is the story of the Roman tribune who actually crucified Christ
on the Cross," LaSalle explained. "This man finds redemption and faith even
while losing his wealth, family and position. He even risks his life for
Demetrius, his former slave. In the sequel, Demetrius takes on the beasts of
the Roman Empire. In the end, he returns with the Prince of Nubia to Sudan
with the robe -- the cloth which Jesus wore to his death."

Then came the connection. "The Christians in Laos understand that Christians
in Sudan are being crucified and sold into slavery for their Christian
faith," said LaSalle. "Somehow, they respond to the messages in these two
movies. It gives them hope. It is the exact opposite of what Lenin would have
wanted."

"Illegal assembly, social division"
Earlier this year, the Stalinist government imprisoned 44 Christians for
holding a Bible study. Most of those imprisoned were members of Partners in
Progress, an Evangelical Aid Organization based in Little Rock, Arkansas,
home of U.S. President Bill Clinton.
A Hmong woman tends to her daily work and two children.

The prisoners were charged with "illegal assembly and creating social
division." The Stalinist Pathet Lao government imposed such restrictions
after it took power in 1975.

Indeed, while Laos' capital Vientiane boasts MTV, Internet cafes, satellite
dishes, Megadeth tee-shirts, Panasonic and even Ovaltine, it is devoid of the
basic freedoms Americans take for granted. Instead, Laos maintains a
Soviet-style internal passport system -- called "bai anuyaat doen thaang" in
Lao, or the ironic "laissez passer" in French.

And for Christians in Laos, religious freedom is non-existent.

A predominately Buddhist country, Laos has been known throughout much of
history as "the land of a million elephants." Today, Laos is home to 20,000
active Catholics -- a remnant of its days as a French colony -- and over 200
Protestant congregations. However, as is the case in Communist China, there
are only two recognized Protestant sects.

"The real Christians who don't believe in Marxism and Stalinism and toe the
government line have to worship in secret," said LaSalle, who told
WorldNetDaily she believes persecution is a rite of passage for the church.
"The Christians in Laos and Western missionaries must be prepared to pass
through the fire" in order to spread the Gospel in that nation, she said.

The virtual Indochina
Signs of renewed Western interest in Laos are everywhere. Sparkling new
European Union vans line the capital's streets. Civil engineering projects
totaling $7 billion are in the works in this country the size of England, but
with only 4.5 million people -- the least populated nation in all of Asia.
WorldNetDaily reporter Anthony LoBaido at the grave of French explorer and
archaeologist Henri Mouhot, who brought knowledge of the Plain of Jars and
Cambodia's Angkor Wat, one of the "Wonders of the Ancient World," to the
West.

A new air fleet called "Mekong Airlines" is in the works to bring the troika
of the French Empire's Inchochina states -- Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam --
back into the European fold. Only this time, the region will be a de facto
colony for gems, timber and tourism.

Laos is the plural for the three separate kingdoms of Lao -- Vientiane, Luang
Prabang and Champasak -- forcibly united by Siamese invaders in the 1820s. By
the 19th Century, the French had taken control of the Vietnamese kingdoms of
Annam and Tonkin. In 1893, the French and Siamese (Thailand) signed a series
of treaties giving the three kingdoms over to France. Hence, the birth of the
colony of "Laos."

Half-ton ration for each person
The UK-led Mines Advisory Group (MAG) works to clean up the "UXO" or
"Unexploded Ordinance" problem across the nation's heartland. It is no easy
task. Laos is the most heavily bombed country in the history of human
civilization. The Plain of Jars near Ponsavan was one of the most devastated
areas. It is estimated that an average of one planeload of bombs was dropped
every eight minutes, 24 hours per day for nine years. At the end of the
Vietnam War, that formula had offered a half-ton ration for each man, woman
and child in Laos.

Each year, 100 children in Laos are killed by inadvertently setting off
undetonated UXO. Most of these children are killed while hunting for scrap
metal, which earns them around 200 kip per kilogram -- a handful of pennies.
(One U.S. dollar equals 7800 kip.) "Most of the children hunt for the scrap
metal in order to sell it and rent a Hollywood video," says Capt. James Hunt,
a former British Royal Marine who works for MAG.

"It's a bad trade-off. Far worse than, let's say, buying the initial public
offering of stock in Mekong Airlines. But we're doing our best to clear the
land and save these innocent children," he said.

For its part, the United States has donated $12 million to the UXO project,
which is run in large part by dedicated British ex-military personnel like
Hunt. It is the only visible sign of any meaningful U.S. presence in the
nation. In both Cambodia and Laos, the U.S. carries very little weight; the
European Union runs the show under the guise of the United Nations.
The Plain of Jars near Ponsavan in Laos. Archaeologists are still divided on
the means of their use. Were they funeral urns, or storage jars for wine?
Regardless, they are considered the Stonehenge of Asia.

Ring around the rosie
High in the misty hills and rolling mountains of central Laos lies the
pristine colonial city of Luang Prabang. It is the scene of glittering
Buddhist temples and French cafes serving gourmet pate and filet mignon. Just
outside this little slice of heaven is a Hmong village. In the surrounding
area, lined with lush banana trees, papaya, pineapples, green beans, coffee
plantations and rice terraces, the visitor will find dogs, cows, oxen,
horses, wild boar and ducks almost everywhere. Women walk along the dusty
streets carrying baskets on their backs filled with firewood.

Although the Hmong have neither running water nor electricity, they seem
perfectly happy in their super-oxygenated abode. They literally walk in the
clouds all day long, performing daily chores and enjoying life's simple
pleasures, oblivious to the high-tech change, violence and social decay that
plagues most of the rest of the world.

"It's absolutely the most perfect place I've ever been to on earth," says
LaSalle, who accompanied this reporter, along with a Hmong guide, on the
journey.
The giant reclining Buddha statue south of Vientiene, Laos' capital.

"Sadly, if you dig a little deeper, you see the scars of something scarcely
believable."

While LaSalle speaks with the village's women, the Hmong children gather and
form a circle. Soon they are moving about in clockwise fashion and singing a
familiar song in the French language.

"Ring around the rosie
Pocket full of posies
Ashes, ashes
We all fall down."

While most Westerners might think of this ditty as a simple children's rhyme,
it is anything but that to the Hmong.

"I learned earlier this year that another French missionary had taught the
Hmong children this song. It is a very old song which dates back to the Black
Plague in Europe. Nostrodamus helped to cure the plague by giving the sick
rose petals to eat," said LaSalle.

"Everyone knows that the government of Laos used biochemical weapons sent by
the Russians for use against the Hmong. And the missionaries have taught the
Hmong children this rhyme as a part of an oral tradition aimed at remembering
the biochemical genocide enacted against them," she said.

The Hmong have had no written language until recent decades. Although the
Hmong women are keen at handicrafts, and stitched characters from their
ancient alphabet into their clothing, over the centuries the meaning of these
characters has been lost. Without a written language, the Hmong depend
heavily on oral traditions.
Laotian waterfall -- Laos hopes to develop its vast hydroelectric resources.

Numerous biochemists, medical doctors and military experts have confirmed the
use of Yellow Rain and other toxins against the Hmong. Yet, the U.S. State
Department refuses to officially endorse these findings, nor condemn either
the Russians or Pathet Lao for using them. In fact, dissenting opinions on
the biological warfare claim that the "Yellow Rain" was nothing more than bee
pollen and/or bee feces.

This same Hmong village, as well as the neighboring Kamu tribal village, was
littered with empty birth control packages handed out by UNICEF -- the United
Nations Children's Fund.

"These people are agrarian-based and can have as many children as they want,"
says Jacques La Rue, another French missionary who works closely with the
Kamu.

"But UNICEF fancies itself as the guardian of global population. Now the Laos
government wants the Hmong and Kamu to have three children or less. There is
no population problem here. The Hmong have been a victim of genocide and Laos
is the least populated country in all of Asia!"
Hmong children waving goodbye.

Secrets and lies
Laos is a country filled with dirty little secrets. One of the most important
-- and gruesome -- is the re-education camps near the northeast border town
of Sam Neua in Hua Phan Province. The province, which borders Vietnam, is
home to 102 caves the Pathet Lao guard as though they housed top military
secrets.

In reality, the caves are off-limits because the Pathet Lao are afraid
foreign tourists will stumble across the brutal Stalinist re-education camps.
These camps, or "Asian gulags" as some call them, have long been the scene of
liquidation of anti-Communists, Hmong and other ethnic tribal peoples and
other dissidents. The camps are well hidden. Over 70 percent of Laos consists
of mountains and plateaus, and Hua Phan Province is one of the most remote
regions in an amazingly remote country.

Between 10,000 and 15,000 dissidents have been brutally worked to death and
murdered in these re-education camps since 1975. Many of the executions were
performed in the Khmer Rouge "Killing Fields" style -- a blow to the head, so
as not to waste bullets, according to numerous Laotians interviewed by
WorldNetDaily.

Another dirty secret is the recent murder of two Lao-American citizens who
the government claimed were on a mission to "spark a counter-revolution" in
the Communist country.

According to officials interviewed by WorldNetDaily in both Thailand and
Laos, Michael Vang and Ly Houa -- both ethnic Hmong -- disappeared into the
jungles of Laos after illegally crossing from the Thai border town of Chiang
Khong.

These two were no ordinary men, however. Michael Vang is the nephew of exiled
Gen. Vang Pao, who led the Hmong's CIA Special Forces in their war against
the Pathet Lao and Viet Cong on behalf of the United States. Gen. Pao now
lives in the U.S.

"The two men were carrying a backpack full of cash and automatic weapons,"
said one U.S. Embassy official on condition of anonymity.
The Wat Xieng Thong Temple in Luang Prabang, built by King Setthathirat in
1560.

An American diplomat in Bangkok confirmed, however, that a joint U.S.-Lao
"fact-finding mission" had been dispatched to the Lao province of Ban Houei
Sai to "learn the whereabouts of these two U.S. citizens."

A Laos Communist Party official told WorldNetDaily that the two men had
"committed an incursion " -- which he described as "the latest in a series of
ill-conceived attempts to arm the Hmong against the Laos government."

U.S. abandoning anti-Communists
Hmong leaders within Laos are convinced that the U.S. Embassy in Thailand,
along with the CIA, U.S. State Department and U.N. are working with the
Pathet Lao to undermine any anti-Communist resistance movement by the Hmong
people.

"America has abandoned the anti-Communist resistance movements of the world,
from Laos to Angola to Mozambique to Central America," said Don McAlvany,
editor of the conservative geopolitical newsletter, the McAlvany Intelligence
Advisor. "It is a sad process which began under President Bush and continued
under Bill Clinton and Madeleine Albright."

"Everyone knows that the right wing in America and the rest of the West is in
a state of shambles," said one prominent Laos-based Hmong leader, in an
interview with WorldNetDaily.

"The French and British deployed police to stop their own people from
peacefully protesting against the recent visit of the president of China --
despite China's terrible record on human rights. I don't think we'll be
getting any help from our former allies in the West," he said.

While the future seems dark for the Hmong, one very bright event has lit up
their idyllic mountain fortress in recent days. As WorldNetDaily reported in
Part 1 of this three-part investigative series, a large group of Hmong
soldiers managed to escape from a refugee camp in Thailand at the eleventh
hour. These soldiers had been targeted for extermination upon their forced
return to Laos -- a return paid for by the U.S. taxpayer and carried out
under the strong arm of the United Nations.
Boats off an isolated island in the Gulf of Thailand wait to take escaped
Hmong CIA Special Forces soldiers to freedom in Malaysia. The soldiers had
been kept in refugee camps at the Thai-Laos border and were slated for forced
repatriation and death upon their return to Stalinist Laos. All photos taken
by Anthony LoBaido.

However, with the help of concerned and sympathetic anti-Communists in Burma,
Thailand and Malaysia, these men were given both money and the means to flee
Thailand and find freedom.

"Gai gan pan fa gup din," said one of the Hmong soldiers as he boarded a
Sampan off the coast of southern Thailand en route to Malaysia. He was saying
that, for the Hmong, a life in exile from their idyllic mountains is "as far
away as the sky is from the earth."




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This is the second installment of Anthony C. LoBaido's three-part
investigative report, "Apocalypse Now." In Part 3, tomorrow, travel with
LoBaido through a dangerous and flood-ridden North Vietnam, where he exposes
the Communist government's fear of the Hmong, and the Hmong's massive turn
towards Christianity. All three parts are accompanied by exclusive photos
taken by Anthony LoBaido.



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