Laos country profile (Source:
BBC)
The government has implemented gradual economic
and business reforms since 2005 to somewhat liberalize its domestic markets. In
2011, it opened a stock market in Vientiane as part of a tentative move towards
capitalism.
Choummaly Sayasone, the head of the ruling
communist Lao People's Revolutionary Party (LPRP), was appointed by the
National Assembly in 2006 and re-appointed in June 2011.
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Laos,
one of the world's few remaining communist states, is one of east Asia's
poorest countries. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 it has
struggled to find its position within a changing political and economic
landscape.
Communist forces overthrew the monarchy in
1975, heralding years of isolation. Laos began opening up to the world in the
1990s, but despite tentative reforms, it remains poor and dependent on
international donations.
OVERVIEW
Economic growth since the 1990s has reduced
poverty levels to some degree, but Laos still relies heavily on foreign aid and
investment, especially from Japan, China and Vietnam.
The Asian currency crisis of 1997 caused the
national currency, the kip, to lose more than nine-tenths of its value against
the US dollar.
Laos is a landlocked, mountainous country,
widely covered by largely unspoilt tropical forest. Less than 5% of the land is
suitable for subsistence agriculture, which nevertheless provides around 80% of
employment.
The main crop is rice, which is grown on the
fertile floodplain of the Mekong River. Vegetables, fruit, spices and cotton
are also grown. Part of the region's heroin-producing "Golden
Triangle", Laos has all but stamped out opium production.
Outside the capital, many people live without
electricity or access to basic facilities.
But Laos is banking on the anticipated returns
from the $1.3bn Nam Theun 2 dam scheme, which was inaugurated in 2010 and is intended
to generate electricity for export to Thailand, to boost its economy and
infrastructure.
A further significant upgrade to Laos'
infrastructure is expected from the construction of the first high-speed rail
line between China and Laos, on which work was due to start in early 2011.
Public dissent in Laos is dealt with harshly
by the authorities, and the country's human rights record has come under
scrutiny.
Laos denies accusations of abuses by the
military against the ethnic minority Hmong. Hmong groups have been fighting a
low-level rebellion against the communist regime since 1975.
FACTS
Full
name: Lao People's Democratic Republic
Population: 6.4 million (UN, 2010)
Capital: Vientiane
Area: 236,800 sq km (91,400 sq miles)
Major
languages: Lao, French (for
diplomatic purposes)
Major
religion: Buddhism
Life
expectancy: 65 years (men), 68 years
(women) (UN)
Monetary
unit: 1 new kip = 100 ath
Main
exports: Clothing, timber products, coffee, gold,
copper, electricity
GNI
per capita: US $880 (World Bank,
2009)
Internet
domain: .la
International
dialling code: +856
LEADERS
President: Choummaly Sayasone
His re-appointment for another five-year term
marked a continuation of the authoritarian status quo in one of the world's
most tightly controlled countries.
He was the only candidate nominated by the
powerful politburo of the LPRP.
He succeeded Khamtay Siphandon as president in
June 2006.
He took over the party leadership from the
octogenarian former president a few months earlier.
The LPRP is the only legal political party in
Laos.
Mr Sayasone is seen as a staunch ally of his
predecessor, who served three terms and oversaw the country's entry into the Association
of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) in 1997.
Choummaly Sayasone, who was born in 1936 in
southern Laos, is a former defence minister and vice president.
MEDIA
The ruling communists maintain strict control
over the media. The government owns all newspapers and broadcast media.
Newspaper circulation figures are very low.
Slandering the state, distorting party
policies and spreading false rumours are all criminal offences.
Media rights group Reporters Without Borders
(RSF) noted in 2010 that "the activities of the president and top party
leaders are always the lead stories in the state media, which are the only
media permitted".
There were some 527,400 internet users by
December 2009 (InternetWorldStats). According to RSF, the authorities do not
censor the internet.
The
press
Vientiane
Times - state-run, English-language
Le
Renovateur - state run, French-language
Vientiane
Mai - state-run daily
Pasaxon -
party monthly
Television
Lao National TV (TVNL) - state-run
Laos Television 3 - joint venture with Thai
company
Radio
Lao National
Radio - state-run
News
agency
KPL -
state-run
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