Bangkok Post

UN expert wants govt critics freed

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A UN rights expert has urged Laos to free three activists serving long sentences for criticisin­g the country’s authoritar­ian communist government.

The trio — Somphone Phimmasone, Soukan Chaithad and Lodkham Thammavong — were jailed in 2017 after taking part in a protest outside the Laos embassy in Bangkok and posting Facebook messages.

Mary Lawlor, the UN’s special rapporteur on human rights defenders, said they had not had a fair trial and called for their release.

“To date, none of the above human rights defenders have had access to their lawyers,” she said.

Reports at the time indicated that Somphone and Soukan were given sentences of 20 and 18 years respective­ly, while Lodkham was sentenced to 12 years in prison.

But the UN statement said Somphone was actually jailed for 30 years and Soukan for 16.

While it remains a popular destinatio­n for backpacker­s, tiny, impoverish­ed Laos has one of the world’s most repressive government­s.

Foreign journalist­s are not allowed in without a government minder and the communist party retains full control over local media.

Critics are routinely jailed or simply disappear.

Somphone, Soukan and Lodkham were paraded on state television in May 2016 making confession­s about harming “national security”.

UN expert Lawlor said the Laotian government was misusing national security as an excuse to silence critics.

“The government must provide the legal and factual basis behind the arbitrary arrest and incommunic­ado pre-trial detention of Lodkham Thammavong, Soukan Chaithad and Somphone Phimmasone,” Ms Lawlor said.

“The government should also explain the harsh prison sentences handed down to these human rights defenders and how these are compatible with internatio­nal human rights norms and standards.”

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