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Sombath Somphone

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Sombath Somphone (Lao: ສົມບັດ ສົມພອນ, born 17 February 1952 in Khammouane Province, Laos) is an internationally acclaimed community development worker and prominent member of Lao civil society.

Biography

Sombath Somphone was born into a poor farming family, the eldest of 8 brothers and sisters. He studied part of his high school in Wisconsin, USA. In the early 1970s he received a scholarship to study at the University of Hawaii where he received a Bachelors degree in Education (1974) and a Masters degree in Agriculture (1978).[1]

Returning to his home country after the Vietnam War and the overthrow of the Royal Kingdom of Laos and the establishment of the Marxist Lao People's Democratic Republic, by North Vietnam and the Socialist Republic of Vietnam(SRV) backed-communist Pathet Lao forces, Sombath’s earliest work was to demonstrate methods of sustainable farming that contribute to food security. He also pioneered the use of participatory rural appraisal techniques in Laos. In 1996 he was given permission by the Ministry of Education to establish the Participatory Development Training Center, PADETC, to provide training for young people and local government officials in community-based development. For some years, this was the only civil society organisation of this kind in Laos.[2]

Recognition

Sombath Somphone (on right) with Desmond Tutu in 2006

In 2001, Sombath Somphone received the Human Resource Development Award for empowering the rural poor in Laos from the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific.

In 2005, he was awarded the Ramon Magsaysay Award for Community Leadership. The citation for his award recognizes his hopeful efforts to promote sustainable development in Laos by training and motivating its young people to become a generation of leaders.[3] Sombath remains the only person from the Lao PDR to receive this award.

In 2010, the East-West Center recognised his work in their anniversay publication '50 Years, 50 Stories'.[4] In 2011, Sombath made the keynote address at the 10th API Regional Workshop; API is a network of Asian Public Intellectuals supported by fellowships from the Nippon Foundation. In 2012, he made the keynote address at the 9th Meeting of the Asia-Europe People's Forum (AEPF) in Vientiane; the International Organising Committee of the AEPF have called Sombath one of the most respected and influential voices for sustainable people-centred and just economic and social development in Laos.[5]

Disappearance and response

Sombath Somphone was abducted in Vientiane on the evening of 15 December 2012. CCTV footage shows that he was stopped by police and then taken away in a pickup truck.[6] The Lao Government immediately denied responsibility for his disappearance.[7]

The disappearance of Sombath Somphone was immediately followed by statements of concern from around the world. The European Union High Representative for Foreign Affairs, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Parliamentarians from Asia and Europe, International NGOs – and many others – have urged the Lao Government to undertake all actions necessary to ensure the safe release of this resepected figure.[8] Winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, Desmond Tutu, wrote to the Lao Prime Minister, Thongsing Thammavong, calling for an urgent investigation but he received no response.[9]

In January 2013, Amnesty International issued a call for urgent action.[10] This was followed in June 2013 by the release of a 26-page briefing document titled Laos: Caught on Camera - the enforced disappearance of Sombath Somphone.[11]

The Centre for Public Policy Analysis, a Washington, D.C., and Southeast Asia-based, non-governmental public policy research organization (NGO) has repeatedly issued appeals and statements calling on the Laos government and security forces to immediately release Sombath Somphone. [12] The CPPA has frequently raised concerns about Sombath Somphone as well as human rights violations, and the persecution of Laotian and Hmong political and religious dissidents, in Laos. [13]

One month after Sombath disappeared, United States Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, issued a statement urging the Lao Government to pursue a transparent investigation of this incident and to do everything in its power to bring about an immediate and safe return home to his family.[14] On 24th March, John Kerry who had taken over as Secretary of State, issued a statement marking the 100th day since Sombath was abducted in which he said Regrettably, the continuing, unexplained disappearance of Mr. Sombath, a widely respected and inspiring Lao citizen who has worked for the greater benefit of all of his countrymen, raises questions about the Lao government’s commitment to the rule of law and to engage responsibly with the world.[15]

According to Scoop Independent News and other sources, on 17 March of 2013, Philip Smith, Executive Director of the CPPA issued an international appeal and statement critical of the Pathet Lao government in Vientiane and communist officials for obstructing the investigation into the arrest, abduction and disappearance of Sombath Somphone by Lao police and security forces. Smith and the CPPA also provided information about, and highlighted, ongoing human rights problems in Laos, including the abduction, disappearance, imprisonment, and extrajudicial killing of political and religious dissidents and minority opposition groups, including the Hmong people as well as visiting Lao- and Hmong-Americans. [16]

Australian human rights and foreign prisoner advocates Kerry and Kay Danes, raised concerns about Sombath Somphone [citation needed] in the context of their earlier arrest, imprisonment and torture in Laos' notorious Phonthong Prison in Vientiane, Laos, by Lao police and security forces, including the Lao People's Army troops with the apparent assistance of Vietnam People's Army advisers.

Laotian NGOs and human Rights organizations, including the United League for Democracy in Laos has issued appeals for the release of Sombath Somphone as well as political prisoners and others who have disappeared at the hands of the Lao security forces, Lao People's Army and Vietnam People's Army in Laos, including the leaders of the Lao Students for Democracy Movement of October 1999, three Hmong-Americans from St. Paul, Minnesota, including Hakit Yang, as well as three Lao-Americans from Minneapolis, Minnesota, who were arrested by the Lao government in Savannakhet in 2013, and disappeared at the hands of Lao military and police officials. [17]

International media coverage of Sombath's disappearance includes reports by the BBC, Al Jazeera Fox News, Deutsche Welle, Le Monde, The Guardian, The Wall Street Journal, ABC Australia and many others. [18]

References

  1. ^ Sombath Somphone: Farmer, Scholar, Scientist, Community Developer
  2. ^ PADETC - 10 years in balance (report)
  3. ^ The 2005 Ramon Magsaysay Award for Community Leadership, Citation for Sombath Somphone
  4. ^ Sombath Somphone - Preparing a Generation of Leaders in Laos in 'East West Centre: 50 years, 50 stories', University of Hawaii, 2010
  5. ^ AEPF statement of concern over the disappearance of Mr. Sombath Somphone
  6. ^ CCTV footage showing the abduction of Sombath Somphone
  7. ^ 'Statement of the Lao spokesman on the Missing of Mr. Sombath Somphone', KPL news agency, 19 December 2012
  8. ^ A collection of statements of concern relating to the disappearance of Sombath Somphone
  9. ^ Archbishop Tutu speaks out for Sombath
  10. ^ Amnesty International: Lao Citizen Abducted, Not Seen or Heard From, 18 January 2013
  11. ^ Amnesty International: Laos must ensure return of disappeared civil society leader, 13 June 2013
  12. ^ The Centre for Public Policy Analysis (CPPA), Washington, D.C. http://www.centerforpublicpolicyanalysis.org
  13. ^ Business Wire (4 March 2013) "Laos: Attacks Intensify Against Lao, Hmong People" http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20130304006755/en/Laos-Attacks-Intensify-Lao-Hmong-People
  14. ^ Press Statement by Hillary Clinton, U.S. Secretary of State, 16 January 2013
  15. ^ Press Statement by John Kerry, U.S. Secretary of State, 24 March 2013
  16. ^ Scoop Independent News,Auckland, New Zealand, (19 March 2013) "Laos Officials Criticized for Obstructing Investigation" http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/WO1303/S00169/laos-officials-criticized-for-obstructing-investigation.htm
  17. ^ Politics and Government Week, (2 May 2013) "Laos: Coalition Opposes U.S. Taxpayers' Funding of Bomb Removal from Vietnam War" http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-328772722.html
  18. ^ Links to approximately 100 news reports on the disappearance of Sombath Somphone