WASHINGTON (AP) — Forty years after the secret U.S. bombing
that devastated Laos, heirs to the war’s deadly legacy of undetonated
explosives are touring America to prod the conscience of the world’s most
powerful nation for more help to clear up the mess.
Two young Laotians — one a bomb
disposal technician, the other the victim of an accidental explosion — arrived
Friday on the anniversary of the end of U.S. military involvement in Vietnam
and its far-less publicized bombing of neighboring Laos. The U.S. dropped 2
million tons of bombs on Laos over a nine-year period up to 1973 — more than on
Germany and Japan during World War II.
Manixia Thor, 25, works on an
all-female team that clears bombs and other explosives from villages and farm
land in her native province of Xieng Khouang, one of the worst-hit areas of the
country. Joining her on the speaking tour is Thoummy Silamphan, 26, who lost
his left hand to a cluster bomb at age 8 as he dug for bamboo shoots to put in
soup. He’s from a poor farming family in the same province and counsels victims
of ordnance accidents that still maim dozens of Lao each year.
Experts estimate that about 30
percent of the cluster bombs failed to explode after they were dropped from
high-flying aircraft, as the U.S. attempted to crush communist forces in Laos
and interdict the Vietcong supply line known as the Ho Chi Minh trail. Large
swaths of northern Laos and its eastern border with Vietnam remain
contaminated.
Manixia, who is ethnic Hmong and
has a 2-year-old son, said her grandparents passed down to her stories of how
they hid in limestone caves during the bombing that obliterated virtually all
of the province’s free-standing buildings and left its plains and mountainsides
pock-marked by craters.
About 15 years ago, her uncle
lost his left hand as he attempted to salvage ball bearings from inside a
cluster bomb. He joined an estimated toll of 20,000 civilians killed or injured
by explosives since the war.
Manixia works for the British
charity, the Mines Advisory Group. Like Thoummy, it’s her first trip to
America. Their tour, organized by an American charity, Legacies of War, and
funded by the State Department, will also take them to New York, California,
Oregon, Washington state and Minnesota as they talk about “UXO,” or unexploded
ordnance.
“I came here because I want to
share with people the continuing dangers of UXO in Laos,” Manixia said. “There’s
still a lot of work to do (to clear UXO) and not enough resources to do it. I
don’t want people to be injured like my uncle was, or for my son to grow up and
also be hurt.”
Despite efforts to educate about
the dangers of the explosives, about 40 percent of the victims in the past 10
years have been children.
Thoummy said that last month two
accidental explosions injured six people in Xieng Khouang, two of them
seriously. Three of them were boys foraging for bamboo; the others were caught
in a blast while burning stubble in a rice field.
Thoummy, whose prosthetic arm is
hard to spot when he wears a tan jacket, works for Quality of Life Association,
a Laotian nonprofit that helps victims cope with the kind of depression that he
grappled with as a boy after his accident.
“My life had stopped. I wanted to
die. I stayed at home and although my family tried to encourage me, I didn’t
care,” he said.
But his outlook changed after a
10-minute conversation he had five months after his accident with a Lao government
official — a survivor of a bomb accident who inspired him to get on with his
life and complete his education. He later studied business management at a
local college.
Thoummy is keen to recount his
own experiences and bears no apparent grudge against the U.S. Asked if America
is responsible for clearing the unexploded bombs, he squirms a little and
concludes: “It would be good if the USA thinks about the problem in Laos and if
we have more support.”
International help for bomb
clearance only began in earnest about 20 years ago, and it will take many
decades more to render affected land safe. Since 1997, the U.S. has provided
$47 million in assistance, including $9 million in 2012. Last July, Hillary
Rodham Clinton became the first U.S. secretary of state to visit the country
since 1955. She spoke to a cluster bomb victim and promised more help.
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